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Memory

This document discusses models of human memory and the neural basis of memory. It summarizes several key models of memory, including Atkinson-Shiffrin's multi-store model, Baddeley and Hitch's model of working memory, and Craik and Lockhart's levels of processing framework. It also discusses the role of the neuron in memory formation, and the roles of the hippocampus, temporal lobe, consolidation theory, and how memory declines with age and can be impacted by brain trauma or diseases like dementia.

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Chhavi Sankhla
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
29 views

Memory

This document discusses models of human memory and the neural basis of memory. It summarizes several key models of memory, including Atkinson-Shiffrin's multi-store model, Baddeley and Hitch's model of working memory, and Craik and Lockhart's levels of processing framework. It also discusses the role of the neuron in memory formation, and the roles of the hippocampus, temporal lobe, consolidation theory, and how memory declines with age and can be impacted by brain trauma or diseases like dementia.

Uploaded by

Chhavi Sankhla
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 49

BRAIN & MEMORY

This knowledge includes:

STUDY DESIGN, 2010 - 2014


Comparison of models for explaining human memory:
 Atkinson-Shiffrin’s multi-store model of memory including
maintenance and elaborative rehearsal, serial position effect and
chunking
 Alan Baddeley and Graham Hitch’s model of working memory:
central executive, phonological loop, visuo-spatial sketchpad,
episodic buffer
 levels of processing as informed by Fergus Craik and Robert Lockhart
 organisation of long-term memory including declarative and episodic
memory, and semantic network theory
Neural basis of memory:
 role of the neuron in memory formation informed by the work of E.
Richard Kandel
 roles of the hippocampus and temporal lobe
 consolidation theory
 memory decline over the lifespan
 amnesia resulting from brain trauma and neurodegenerative diseases
including dementia and Alzheimer’s disease
How is information processed?

MODELS OF MEMORY
 Memory is not a ‘single organ’ or a single ‘thing’, rather it consists
of a collection of complex interconnected and interacting systems
 We do not have a memory, but we have different memory systems
which share a common function of:

storing information Processing different


(learned through experience) information

Memory
systems
Storing information
retrieving the information
(in different ways & types of
(when needed)
information)

 our perceptual systems, eg vision are constantly inputting


information, however the brain must work out what to attend to,
process and store in memory, and what not to!
DEFINING MEMORY
 Memory is often defined as the storage and retrieval of
information acquired through learning.
 the existence of memory indicates that learning has
occurred and the memory is the internal record or
representation of an event &/or experience.
 Memory is also defined as requiring and as information
processing (think… like a computer)
Memory as information processing -
 Encoding – converting information to a useable form
 Storage – retaining information in memory
 Retrieval – information recovered from memory when
needed
 All three processes are required and if any one is not
included, the memory will not form. (see fig 6.4 on page
291)
Memory as an info-processing system
 Memory is an active (uses energy) information-processing system that:
 Receives,
 Organises
 Stores &recovers information

• Info is
Encoding retained in Retrieval
brain
• Info is • Info is
Incoming
sensory input converted Storage recovered
for storage when
needed

 Memory actively alters and organises information, then stores it so that it can be
easily retrieved when needed
 There are 3 key processes involved in these systems. If any of these processes fail,
memory will fail
An additional aspect of the Atkinson & Shiffrin human multi store model included:
 Structural features & Control processes.
MEMORY LIKE A
COMPUTER ????
 Encoding = hitting the letters on the key board ->
it goes into the computer

 Storage = we hit ‘save’ -> we name the file and


store the information for later on when
we save the file

 = process of getting past information


Retrieval
back -> we need to use the right ‘cues’
in order to get the information back,
but if we do then we have the original
MODEL’S FOR EXPLAINING HUMAN MEMORY
 As the human memory is complex and multifaceted, is it
NOT studied together, rather it is broken down into
pieces or sections, each being studied separately.
 Each of these is referred to as a MODEL

 The three main theories that explain how human


memory functions are:
1. Atkinson-Shiffrin multi-store model
2. Baddeley and Hitch’s model of working memory
3. Craik and Lockhart’s levels of processing
framework
ATKINSON-SHIFFRIN’S MULTI-
STORE MODEL OF MEMORY
 Based in the 1960’s
 Proposed a shift in the single memory model => assumption
that human memory has several systems/processes involved.
 By Richard Atkinson & Richard Shiffrin – Americans.
 This model was also called/considered modal model, as it
merged and represented many other models during this time.
 It is also known as the stage model, as it put forward that the
flow of information moves in stages through each component
of memory.

 Information passes through 3 levels of memory as it is


encoded, stored and retrieved, and these 3 levels are sensory
register, short term store & long term store
Sensory register Reh
e
• The entry point for all new at arsal
ti
poi me
information into memory from crit n
ica t
the external environment mo l for
per r
• Stores vast amount of incoming ma e
If information is attended sto nent
visual information, for 100’s ra
(LT ge
to, it moves into short milliseconds M)
term memory store
Short term store
• A temporary working memory
• Here we can manipulate information from every
If day/common tasks
information • Holds all information that we are aware of at that
is not point in time
attended • Has a limited capacity – 7 items at 1 time
to, it is lost • Only held for about 30 sec unless we make an effort
to keep it there (attend to it), eg rehearsal

Long term store


• Information held relatively permanently in an highly organised way
• Essentially can be an unlimited capacity
• Unlike sensory register & short term store – information in long term store does not usually
decay and can stored for …… a whole lifetime
• According to Atkinson & Shiffrin – it is our inability to retrieve required information that
results ineffective search strategies
• Problems with retrieval may also be due to ‘interference’ with the information and this results
in a disruption in the retrieval process
Atkinson-Shiffrin multi-store model
Rehearsal

Paid attention Info encoded or


to info rehearsed

Sensory Sensory Short-term Long-term


info Memory Memory Memory

Retrieval

Info not paid Not rehearsed Various reasons


attention to… or encoded

Lost from sensory Displaced from


memory short-term memory Forgotten

CRIMD
STRUCTURAL & CONTROLLED PROCESSES
 Structural features of memory are the permanent
features that do not alter from situation to situation – they
are three levels of information processing:
 Sensory memory,
 Short term memory (STM) &
 Long term memory (LTM)

 Control processes are the activities the individual does to


process the information (eg they have ‘control’ over what
they attended to and process)
 Attention – no information will be encoded if we don’t pay
attention to it
 Rehearsal – process that goes over information and helps it be
stored
But all of this was developed over 40 years ago ….. And
we know have more knowledge …
Stages of memory – Sensory Memory
 Sensory Memory
 Entry point of memory
 Capacity to store all sensory stimuli (unlimited)
 Stored as the original form of stimulus (buffer –
need more processing before it can be stored)
 Not consciously aware of most of the info in
sensory stage, directing attention to it is what
causes transfer to short-term memory
 Incoming stimuli is stored as a memory trace in
different sensory registers based on the type of
sense
 Iconic memory – visual
 Echoic memory - auditory
Sensory Memory includes
 Iconic memory ( I as in eye)
 Visual images are stored here for about 0.2-0.4 seconds
 Stored as overlapping images
 Allows perception of flowing movement during a film,
or a figure drawn with a sparkler at night

 Echoic memory (e as in ear)


 Sound stimuli are stored here for around 3-4 seconds
 This is longer than in iconic memory as sound takes
longer to produce
 Allows comprehension of speech by connecting
individual sounds coherently into words and sentences
Stages of memory – Short-term memory
 Activity: Capacity of STM
 Read aloud the following series of numbers and ask students to recall each
line in order.
 6, 4, 7 (3 items)
 9, 0, 1, 8 (4 items)
 4, 3, 5, 7, 2 (5 items)
 7, 1, 3, 8, 9, 4 (6 items)
 3, 6, 8, 4, 9, 1, 5 (7 items)
 2, 6, 4, 9, 1, 5, 7, 3 (8 items)
 1, 7, 5, 8, 6, 3, 9, 2, 4 (9 items)
 2, 6, 7, 3, 5, 4, 9, 1, 8, 3 (10 items)
 Onaverage, how many numbers did each person recall from each list?
This is the capacity of STM.
 Activity: Duration of STM
 Students learn the following sequence of numbers
 4, 5, 3, 6, 2, 7, 8
 Test immediately, then after 2 minutes
 How many people remembered the sequence? This is duration of STM
Stages of memory: Short-term memory

 Short-term memory (STM) is a memory system that has


a limited capacity and duration
 It also stores the information in an encoded format
 Described as the “seat of conscious thought” –
information only registers in STM once it is paid
attention to – in conscious awareness
 Duration of STM
 Without rehearsal (active use), recall starts to decline after
about 12 seconds and is almost completely gone after 18
seconds (occasionally can last up to 30 sec)
 Using rehearsal, information can be retained indefinitely in
STM
Short-term memory
 Capacity of STM
 Theamount of pieces of information that can be stored in
STM is 7 ± 2 (between 5-9 items)
 Adding in more items displaces (pushes out) existing items in
STM – this is called displacement, shown below

Now becomes ..

 Recalling information from long-term memory can also


displace items from STM
 Information is lost primarily within STM by either
displacement (pushing out) or by decay (not being used-
think fruit!)
SHORT TERM MEMORY

Capacity of STM cont…..


 Chunking is a method of increasing the capacity of
STM
 Definiton: grouping or separate bits of information into a
larger single chunk of information.
 Separate pieces of info are remembered as single units
(groups info into chunks)
 Only similar info can be chunked together (chunking)
 Still only retain 7 ± 2 chunks
 Chunks can be numbers, images, words, sentences, phrases
and even abbreviations
 This is why we have phone numbers broken into parts ……
5427 2600 rather than 54272600.
SHORT TERM MEMORY
STM as working memory
 Term working memory is used to emphasise the active part
of memory where information we are aware of constantly, is
actively ‘worked on; in a variety of ways
 Enables us to use the information in sensory memory and
move it to LTM
 Often we combine information from sensory memory and
LTM to perform mental processes, such as emotions,
comprehension, problem solving, planning & daydreaming.
 So this ‘working memory’ provides a temporary storage
facility and mental workspace for information currently
being used within a conscious cognitive activity.
 The STM working memory is often compared to a computer
Effects of rehearsal
 Rehearsal is the process of actively and consciously
manipulating information to keep it in STM for longer
than the normal 18 sec. (Increases duration)
 Maintenance rehearsal
 Repeating info over and over usually vocally (out loud) or
sub-vocally (in your head)
 Works indefinitely to keep info in STM
 Does not always transfer info into long-term memory
 Elaborate rehearsal
 Links new info to existing knowledge in a meaningful way
 More active than maintenance rehearsal (requires more
effort)
 Very effective in transferring info into long-term memory,
EFFECTS OF REHEARSAL
Maintenance
Rehearsal
Paid attention Elaborative
to info Rehearsal

Sensory Sensory Short-term Long-term


info Memory Memory Memory

Retrieval

Info not paid Not rehearsed Various reasons


attention to… or encoded

Lost from sensory Displaced from


memory short-term memory Forgotten

CRIMD
Stages of memory – Long-term memory
 Long-term memory (LTM) is the relatively permanent
memory system that has potentially unlimited capacity
and duration (life-long)
 Info in LTM is inactive (not in use) and we are not
consciously aware of it until it is retrieved
 Due to the sheer volume of info in LTM, we use cues
(intentional or unintentional) to speed up the process of
retrieval
 Cues enable retrieval of specific info, not the entire contents
of LTM – usually very efficient and very fast
 Once retrieved, the info is stored in STM until it is no longer
needed/in use. It is then transferred back into LTM
 Failure to retrieve info from LTM is usually due to poor
organisation during encoding and storage, or an inappropriate
cue was used during retrieval
Types of long-term memory
 Memories in LTM are relatively permanent or at least
very longlasting
 Forgetting is most likely due to a failure to retrieve info
– poor encoding or poor cue
 Retrieval cues: a stimulus that assists in the process of
locating and retrieving information stored in memory.

There are two major types of LTM (LTM stores):


① Procedural memory (Implicit memories – “how?”)
 Knowing how to do stuff – actions and activities
 Often difficult to explain this knowledge
 Usually learnt through observation and practice
 Not usually consciously recalled
Types of long-term memory
② Declarative memory (Explicit memories – “What?”)
 Memories of facts and/or events
 Usually consciously recalled
 Two types of declarative memory:

a) Episodic memory
 Memories of specific events or personal experiences
 Include references to “when” and “where”
b) Semantic memory
 Memories of general academic knowledge
 Facts not necessarily related to a specific place or time
 Include references about “what” and “who”
Characteristics of the stages of memory
Stage of Capacit
Function Form of storage Duration
memory y
Sensory •Receives sensory Original sensory form Unlimited •Varies based
memory information E.g. lingering sense of on sensation
(SM) (stimuli) from sound or pressure •Usually
environment between 0.2 –
4 sec
•Occasionally
up to 10 sec

Short-term •Receives info from Encoded in terms of 7 ±2 •Usually 18-


memory SM physical properties of pieces or 20 sec
(STM) •Receives info from stimuli chunks of •Occasionally
LTM E.g. Starts with L info up to 30 sec

Long-term •Storehouse for Encoded in terms of Unlimited •Potentially


memory encoded info semantics - meaning permanent
(LTM) coming from STM
Levels of processing framework –
CRAIK AND LOCKHART
 Craik and Lockhart proposed a framework of memory
that emphasised the importance of the level of
processing in how well information is stored in LTM
 Info is stored best in LTM semantically (by meaning) so
if the meanings of concepts are processes during
learning, they are more likely to be recalled later –
elaborate rehearsal is more effective for LTM than
maintenance rehearsal
 The deeper the level of processing (more elaborate
encoding) the better the recall
 Visualencoding – “is there a letter k in the word?”
 Acoustic encoding – “does it rhyme with hat?”
 Semantic encoding – “is it a synonym of difficult?”
Levels of processing framework
 Levels of processing or depth are hard to define
specifically and to measure
 Despite this problem the idea of better processing and
therefore better storage is supported widely by research

Shallow Visual What the word Colours, shapes and


processing encoding looks like patterns detected

Intermediate Acoustic What the word Item is identified


processing encoding sounds like

Deep Semantic What the word Meaningful


processing encoding means associations are made
Model of working memory –
BADDELEY AND HITCH’S
Baddeley and Hitch’s model of working memory
describes STM as a functional system with three
components that work independently but can also
interact:
① Phonological loop (Verbal working memory)
 Verbalinformation is stored in a sound-based form
(phonological)
 Only hold about 2 sec worth of info (around 7 items
depending on length of words)
② Visuo-spatial sketchpad (Visual working memory)
 Visual info is anything you can see or imagine, spatial info is
position and location of objects in space
 Also has limited duration and capacity (around 4 items)
Model of working memory –
BADDELEY AND HITCH’S
③ Central executive
 Controls attention
 Integrates information from the phonological loop and visuo-spatial
sketchpad with info from LTM
 Coordinates the flow of info between the working memory system
and LTM
 Manipulates the info held in the phonological loops and visuo-spatial
sketchpad – the working component of the model of working
memory
 Episodic buffer (a fourth component added in 2000)
 A sub-system of the working memory that enables the different
components to interact with LTM
 Has limited capacity (about 4 chunks of info)
 Can hold info in any form and so can integrate phonological loop and
visuo-spatial sketchpad – temporary workspace where various pieces
of info can be put together in a meaningful way
Model of working memory

Sensory input
Rehearsal Rehearsal

Phonological Visuo-spatial
loop sketchpad

Central Executive

Episodic Buffer

Long-Term Memory
ALAN BADDELEY AND GRAHAM HITCH’S
MODEL OF WORKING MEMORY
Phonological
Loop
storage of verbal
speech information Episodic Buffer
Central Executive
Integrates useful LTM
• Controls attention into what currently
being worked on
• Integrates info from the
two storage sub systems Pulls together streams
of different info into
• does the ‘working out’ ‘episodes’ as a
meaningful whole
•The seat of consciousness
The workbench
Visio spatial
Sketchpad
Storage of visual and
spatial information
Types of long-term memory
 Complete the table in your workbooks
Types of Long Term Memories
Procedural Memories
Definition: Example:

Declarative Memories
Definition: Example:

Episodic Memory Semantic Memory


Example: Example:
Organisation of Information in
LTM
 Long term memory’s most distinctive feature is its
organisation of information
 The task of retrieving information from LTM differs from
the process of retrieving information from STM.
 In short term memory, the search and retrieve tasks
involve scanning only 7 + 2 items to locate the relevant
information.
 This 7 + 2 system doesn’t work with LTM, as there is
such vast information to store, so there is a need for
organisation to assist the storage and retrieval process.
Hippocampus & Temporal lobe
 The hippocampus is a curved structure found in each of
the lower temporal lobes – one in each hemisphere
(think horseshoes!)
 Its about 3.5cm long and in humans have one in each of
the lower region of the temporal lobe

Corpus
callosum
Thalamus

Amygdala
THE MEDIAL TEMPORAL LOBE
THE HIPPOCAMPUS & MEDIAL TEMPORAL LOBE – DAMAGE AND
MEMORY
 Henry Molaison (H.M.) was a split brain patient who also had his
medial temporal lobe (inner surface area towards the temporal
lobe that includes hippocampus & amygdala) removed to stop his
extremely severe epilepsy
 Medical success in preventing seizures, however it affected his
memory
 His personality and basic functioning remained unchanged,
however he suffered major memory impairment, and left with
permanent anterograde amnesia (Can’t form new LTM’s)
 Eg. While he could remember events from before his surgery, he couldn’t
remember anything that occurred after his surgery – couldn’t form new
long-term memories
 Other mental abilities and STM fine
 Eg. He could retain info in STM as long as he maintained

attention and actively rehearsed it, but could not transfer it into
LTM
H.M’S HIPPOCAMPUS & MEDIAL
TEMPORAL LOBE – DAMAGE & MEMORY

 This established that the hippocampus and medial


temporal lobe are involved or has a role in LTM
formation,
 It is NOT the storage site of long-term memories
however

 Evidence that LTM is most definitely a distinct sub system


of memory (STM fine)
 This demonstrated that the hippocampus & medial
temporal lobe has an important role in the formation or
encoding of new declarative explicit memories (semantic
OR

THINK …..THE HIPPO ON


CAMPUS LIVES ON MEMORY
LANE
Amnesia
 Amnesia refers to any form of memory loss
 Can be partial or complete
 Can be temporary or permanent
 Amnesia is usually caused by brain trauma (inflicted brain
injury or acquired brain injury)
 The severity of the injury determines the type and severity of
the amnesia
 Usually experience a period of unconsciousness, followed by a
period of confusion, then the period of time ‘forgotten’ usually
shrinks to only a few seconds of minutes directly after the moment
of trauma
 Experience of amnesia can vary from a few days to several
weeks, but commonly disappears suddenly, often after a
Types of Amnesia
① Anterograde amnesia
 Loss of memory of experiences that occur after the brain
trauma
 Difficulty learning new information
 Can clearly recall events before the trauma
 Can retain new info in STM indefinitely as long as it is
rehearsed
 Problem lies in the transference of information from STM into
LTM
 Experienced by people with Korsakoff’s syndrome and
Alzheimer's disease
 Korsakaff’s syndrome (neurodegenerative disease)
 Acute inflammation and damage to hippocampus and thalamus
 Often associated with chronic alcoholism and thiamine deficiency
Types of Amnesia
① Retrograde amnesia
 Loss of memory of old info and experiences before the
trauma occurred
 Loss can extend back from moments to years
 Usually temporary
 However, very common to permanently ‘lose’ the memory of
the moment leading up to the trauma itself
 This permanent loss is explained by the interruption of
consolidation into LTM
Dementia & Alzheimer’s Disease
 Dementia & Alzheimer's discussed in this study design
(for a full list FYI you can read box 6.12 for common
types of dementia)
 Common acquired brain injury is caused by
neurodegenerative disease where brain tissue slowly
deteriorates over time
 Dementia
 Progressive decline in mental functioning
 Loss of mental capacity: decline in
intellectual ability, poor judgment, poor
social skills and abnormal emotional
reactions
 Memory loss is persistent and progressive
 Not a normal part of ageing
 Alzheimer’s disease
 A form of dementia
 Physical break down of neurons causes plaques in the brain –

Alzheimer’s Disease
sections of neurons tightly bound together, causing gaps in other
areas (only observable post-mortem) caused by high
concentration of the protein amyloid in the brain (see next slide
for Amy Loid!)
 Often have low concentrations of neurotransmitter; acetylcholine
 Affects around 100 000 people in Australia
 No accurate diagnostic tests available. Only accurately
diagnosed after death and brain tissue is examined for plaques
 Memory loss, confusion, irritability and impaired decision-
making are common symptoms
 Memory loss is persistent and progressive
 Episodic memories are affected
 Forget words and names of people and commonly known facts
 Lose ability to follow directions of a story plot
 Lose ability to perform everyday skills
ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE: POST-MORTEM

So we know:
 Show high levels of the protein Amyloid
 Not usually in the brain
 Highly toxic – causes cell death
 Causes the development of the plaques and tangles
 Brains also have a massive lack of acetylcholine (an
important neurotransmitter)

 The rhyme:
DEEP WITHIN THE TEMPORAL LOBE-
THE AMYGDALA
 Mediation of fear – sympathetic arousal
 Seizures involving the amygdala
involve intense fear
 Damage leaves a person unable to learn
a fear response through classical
conditioning
 Involved in remembering the emotional
significance of an event
 Can effect the consolidation of memory
– stimulation better recall, retardation
poorer recall
 Also concerned with learning.
Memory decline over the lifespan
 Memory decline is not an inevitable consequence of
ageing
 If it does decline, short-term memory and explicit
declarative memories (episodic and semantic) tend to be
affected, rather than procedural memories

 Aging and STM decline


 Infotransmission in NS is generally less efficient in older
people (physical effects of ageing)
 The more complicated the task, the more STM decline is
evident in older people
 Less activity in areas of the frontal lobe associated with STM
when >60 years old
Memory decline over the lifespan
 Ageing and LTM decline
 Episodic memories have been shown to start a steady decline as
early as 30 years old
 Procedural memories appear to remain intact over time
 Semantic memories don’t appear to be affected much by age
 However, older people don’t tend to encode new information in as
much detail or as accurately as younger people – so often takes an
older person longer to learn new things
 Speed and fluency of retrieval also tends to decline with age
 Decline in memory in older people is often explained by lack of
motivation or more commonly, a lack of confidence
 Recall of items is lower, but recognition of items is no different
than younger people – use recognition tests, not recall
 Memory decline can also be explain by cognitive slowing due to
natural shrinkage of frontal lobes with age. Cognitive slowing
affects all cognitive processes, not just memory
SO TO RECAP …..
 Older people Do take longer to learn new info

 STM – depends on the task, easy one part tasks


ok, tasks that require divided attention not so
good. Recall down, Recognition same.

 LTM - Episodic down, Procedural same,


Semantic Same.

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