Chapter 7. Memory
Chapter 7. Memory
• Primacy effect:
– tendency to remember well the first items
• Recency effect:
– tendency to remember the final items
Methods of Testing Memory
• Memory is not an all-or-none thing:
– Depends on testing method
– Tip-of-the-tongue experience
Methods of Testing Memory
1. Free Recall:
– To say what you remember
2. Cued Recall
– To receive significant hints about material
3. Recognition:
– To select the correct ones among several choices
4. Savings Method (relearning method)
– To compare speed of original learning to speed of
relearning
Methods of Testing Memory
5. Implicit Memory:
– Explicit (direct) memory Vs. Implicit (indirect)
memory
– Priming: reading/hearing a word temporarily
increases the chance that using it, even if you are
not aware of influence
Methods of Testing Memory
Methods of Testing Memory
Procedural memories:
– memories of motor skills
Declarative memories:
– memories we can readily state in words
Information-Processing View of Memory
Sensory Store:
• Momentary storage of sensory
information
• Iconic memory
• Echoic memory
Information-Processing View of Memory
Sperling (1960);
– Demonstrated
the capacity of
sensory store for
visual
information
Information-Processing View of Memory
Short-Term Memory:
• Temporary storage of recent events
– fades within seconds
• Small, easily measured capacity
– George Miller (1956) “magical number seven
plus or minus two”
• Chunking: grouping items into meaningful
sequences or clusters
Information-Processing View of Memory
Information-Processing View of Memory
Long-Term Memory
• relatively permanent store
– a well-learned memory can last a lifetime
• vast, hard-to measure capacity
• depends on retrieval cues:
– associated information that might help regain the
memory
• Source amnesia:
– forgetting where or how you learned something
Information-Processing View of Memory
Long-Term Memory
• Semantic Memory
– memory of general principles and facts
• Episodic Memory
– memory for specific events in person’s life.
– episodic memories are more fragile
• older people are likely to forget specific episodes
while retaining semantic memories
WORKING MEMORY
• Working memory:
– A system for working with current information
– Four major components (Baddeley, 2001)
WORKING MEMORY
Phonological Loop:
– stores and rehearses speech information
Visuospatial Sketchpad:
– stores and manipulates visual and spatial information
WORKING MEMORY
Central Executive:
– governs shifts of attention
– hallmark of a good working memory is the ability to shift
attention as needed among different tasks
Episodic Buffer:
– binds together the various parts of a meaningful experience
Long-Term Memory
Levels-of-processing principle (Graik ve Lockhart, 1972)
– How easily you retrieve a memory depends on the
number and types of associations you form
Long-Term Memory
Encoding Specifity Principle (Tulving ve Thomson,1973)
– The associations you form at the time of learning
will be the most effective retrieval cues
– State-dependent memory: the tendency to
remember something better if your body is in the
same condition during recall as it was during the
original learning
Long-Term Memory
Long-Term Memory
Emotional Arousal and Memory Storage:
• People usually remember emotionally arousing
events;
• Flashbulb memories
– intense, detailed
but not always accurate
Long-Term Memory
Emotional Arousal and Memory Storage:
• For a list of words, people recall emotional word
better than neutral words
– 1. Emotional arousal increases the release of cortisol
and epinephrine
• moderate increases stimulate brain areas that enhance
memory storage
• when emotional arousal verges on panic, memory is less
reliable
– 2. Emotion increases confidence that the memory
must be right
Long-Term Memory
Mnemonic Devices:
• Any memory aid that relies on encoding each item
in a special way
Long-Term Memory
Mnemonic Devices:
Long-Term Memory
Mnemonic Devices:
• Method of loci (method of places)
Memory Retrieval and Error
Retrieval and Interference
• Ebbinghaus forgot more
than half of each list
within the first hour
• However most college
students remember nearly
90% of a list
• Interference from all the
previous lists he had
learned
Memory Retrieval and Error
Retrieval and Interference:
• Proactive interference;
– the old materials increase forgetting of the new
materials
– short-term memories fade fast because of proactive
interference from similar materials
• Retroactive interference;
– the new materials increase forgetting of the old
materials
Memory Retrieval and Error
Memory Retrieval and Error
Reconstructing Past Events:
• During an original experience, we construct a
memory. When we try to retrieve that memory,
we reconstruct an account based on ;
– surviving memories
– expectations of what must have happened
• filling the gaps based on logical inferences
Memory Retrieval and Error
Reconstruction and Inference in List Memory:
• If people read a list of related words and try to
recall them, they are likely to include closely
related words that were not on the list.
– They have remembered the gist and reconstructed
what else must have been on the list.
Memory Retrieval and Error
List A: sleep
List B: sweet
List C: fate
Memory Retrieval and Error
Reconstructing Stories:
• Someone who tries to retell a story after
memory of details had faded ;
– rely on the gist
– leave out some details that seemed irrelevant
– add or change other facts to fit the logic of the story
Memory Retrieval and Error
Hindsight Bias:
• People often revise their memories of what they
previously expected, saying that how events
turned out was what they had expected all
along.
– “I knew that was going to happen”
Memory Retrieval and Error
Hindsight Bias:
• Most people
overestimate how soon
other people will
recognize the image
Memory Retrieval and Error
Recovered Memory Vs. False Memory:
Recovered Memory:
– reports of long-lost memories, prompted by clinical
techniques
– Repression
– Dissociation
False Memory:
– someone believes to be a memory but that does not
correspond to real events
AMNESIA
Amnesia = loss of memory
• H.M.
• damage to hippocampus
– normal short-term,
procedural and implicit
memories
– difficulty storing new long-
term declarative memories
AMNESIA
• Anterograde amnesia:
– inability to store new long-term memories
• Retrograde amnesia;
– loss of memory for events that occured shortly before the
brain damage
AMNESIA
Amnesia After Damage to Prefrontal Cortex:
• Damage to the prefrontal cortex also produces
amnesia:
– receives extensive input from the hippocampus
AMNESIA
Amnesia After Damage to Prefrontal Cortex:
• Confabulations:
– Attempts to fill in the gaps in their memory
– Out-of-date information
• replacing current reality with something more pleasant
from the past
• Intact performance on implicit memory tests
AMNESIA
Alzheimer’s Disease:
• A condition occuring mostly in old age, characterized
by increasingly severe memory loss, confusion,
depression, disordered thinking and impaired
attention
AMNESIA
Alzheimer’s Disease:
• gradual accumulation of
harmful proteins in the
brain and deterioration
of brain cells, leading to
a loss of arousal and
attention
AMNESIA
Alzheimer’s Disease:
• Areas of damage include both hippocampus
and prefrontal cortex
– anterograde and retrograde amnesia
– confabulations
– much better implicit memories than explicit ones
– overall decrease of arousal and attention
AMNESIA
Infant / Childhood Amnesia:
• Scarcity of early declarative memories