Memory - Scott County Preschool
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Transcript Memory - Scott County Preschool
What would life be like without memories?
Memory
“…you are what you remember. Without
memory…there would be no savoring of past joys, no
guilt or anger over painful recollections. You would
instead live in an enduring present, each moment
fresh. But each person a stranger, every language
foreign, every task… a new challenge. You would even
be a stranger to yourself.”
What is memory?
Memory: the input, storage, and retrieval of what has
been learned or experienced
Memory
One important to thing to remember when discussing
memory:
Memory is personally constructed!
What is Memory?
Processing Model of Memory- Atkinson and
Shiffrin (1968)
Sensory Memory
A very brief memory storage immediately following
initial stimulation of a receptor
Sensory Memory Cont.
Types of Sensory Memory
Echoic (sound) or Iconic (visual) memory
How long does it last?
Iconic lasts up to 1 second
Echoic lasts up to 1 to 2 seconds
If it is not rehearsed or thought to be important than it is
forgotten
Purpose:
Keeps you from being overwhelmed
Decision time
Allows stability & continuity
Short Term Memory (STM)
STM is memory that is limited in capacity to about
seven-ten items and in duration by the subject’s active
rehearsal
Lasts anywhere from 20 seconds to 1 minute
Maintenance Rehearsal- If information is not rehearsed
then it will be forgotten
Working memory
Focusing on what is novel or important
When using information from Long Term Memory it is
believed the information enters into STM so we can “work”
from that information
How many circles are on the next slide?
Chunking
Chunking
Chunking
The process of
grouping items to
make them easier to
remember.
Roy G. Biv
You have 5 seconds to remember the following list…
Mrs. Sunda’s Grocery List
Milk
Cheese
Butter
Eggs
Flour
Cat food
Sugar
Apples
Grapes
Shampoo
Bread
Green beans
Jam
What does Mrs. Sunda need from
the grocery?
List as many as you can remember!
Mrs. Sunda’s Grocery List
Milk
Cheese
Butter
Eggs
Flour
Cat food
Sugar
Apples
Grapes
Shampoo
Bread
Green beans
Jam
Primary Recency Effectyou are better able to
recall info at the
beginning and end of the
list.
Long Term Memory (LTM)
Long Term Memory is the storage of information over
extended periods of time
LTM does not work like a filing cabinet
Instead we reconstruct the information that we need at a given
time
LTM is the result of the other two levels of memory
Types of LTM
Semantic- knowledge of language, including its rules,
words and meanings
Episodic- chronological retention of the events of
one’s life
Declarative- stored knowledge that can be called forth
consciously as needed
Procedural- permanent storage of learned skills that
does not require conscious recollection
LTM Continued
Miscellaneous
Process of memory is limited and fallible
Primarily focus on important stimuli or novel stimuli
Information we do keep in STM rapidly decays unless
rehearsed
Flashbulb Memory
A clear memory of an emotionally
significant moment or event
The Processes of Memory
There are 3 ways to process memory
Encoding
Storage
Retrieval
1. Encoding
The processing of information into the memory
system
How We Do IT:
Two types of processing
Automatic
Effortful
Encoding
Automatic Processing
Occurs with little to no effort
Automatic processing is another example of
parallel processing
Cannot switch off encoding
Encoding
Effortful Processing
Information we remember only with effort and attention
Boost memory through rehearsal: conscious repetition
of information either to maintain it in consciousness or
to encode it
Encoding
Rehearsal was demonstrated by Hermann Ebbinghaus
Studied learning and forgetting
Encoding
JIH
VUM
BAZ
WAV
FUB
ZOF
YOX
GEK
SUJ
HIW
XIR
DAX
IEQ
Ebbinghaus discovered the simple principle of
memory and learning
The amount remembered depends on the time
spent learning
Even after we learn material additional rehearsal
increases retention
Encoding
Spacing Effect
We retain information better when rehearsal is
distributed over time
Spacing effect= much better than cramming!!!!!!!!!!
Encoding
Serial Position Effect (Primary Recency Effect)
Our tendency to recall best the last and first items in a
list
Encoding
What we encode:
When encoding verbal information we usually encode
its meaning
We remember what is encoded
Encoding Verbal Information
Semantic encoding- encoding meaning
Acoustic encoding- encoding of sound
Visual encoding- encoding of picture images
Encoding
Craik and Tulvig
Flashed words at people and then asked a question that
required the people to process the words visually,
acoustically or semantically
Found semantic encoding elicited much better memory
Ebbinghaus estimated that meaningful material required 1/10
of the effort when compared to learning nonsense material
What does this mean?
We recall information we can relate to ourselves
Self-reference effect
Find personal meaning in what you are studying!!!!!
Encoding
Encoding imagery
Imagery: mental images
Rosy retrospection: people tend to recall events more
positively than they evaluated at the time
Encoding
Mnemonics: memory aids, especially those techniques
that use vivid imagery and organizational devices
Developed by the ancient Greeks
Storage
The process by which information is maintained over
time.
How much information is stored depends on how
much effort was put into encoding the information
and it’s importance.
Info can be stored for a few
seconds or for much longer.
Think about playing an instrument:
What all goes into this?
Storage
Karl Lashley (1950) found that memories do not reside
in a particular spot of the brain
Train rats and cut out parts of the brain and can still run
a maze
MEMORY IS STORED THROUGHOUT
THE BRAIN!
Storage
Synaptic Changes
Kandel and Swartz (1982) looked that the Aplysia
Found that during the learning process (classical
conditioning) the slug released serotonin
Synapses then become more efficient at transmitting signals.
Long-term Potentiation (LTP)- increase in a synapse’s
firing potential after brief, rapid stimulation.
Believed to be the neural basis of memory
Storage
Confirmation of Long-term Potentiation (LTP) Drugs that block LTP interfere with learning
Mutant mice engineered to lack enzyme needed for LTP
can’t learn their way out of a maze (and vice-versa)
Injecting rats with a chemical that blocks the
preservation of LTP erases recent learning
Storage
Pharmaceutical Companies are competing to
develop new memory boosting drugs
Alzheimer’s
Mild cognitive impairments
Drug would boost the protein CREB- turns
genes off or on
Repeated neural firing of genes produce synapse
strengthening proteins allowing Long-term
Potentiation .
CREB may help to reshape and consolidate STM into
LTM
Developing drugs that boosts glutamate
Enhances synaptic communication
Storage
Electroconvulsive therapy
Passing an electric current through the brain will not
disrupt old memories but will wipe out recent memories
Storage
Emotions/Stress and Memory
When stressed or excited hormones make more
glucose energy
Amygdala boosts activity and available proteins
in brain’s memory forming areas
“Stronger emotional experiences make for stronger,
more reliable memories.” (and vice versa)
People given drugs that block stress hormones are
more likely to forget details of stressful events
Storage
Implicit memory: retention independent of conscious
recollection
Explicit memory: memory of facts and experiences
that one can consciously know and declare
Storage
Hippocampus:
Explicit-facts and episodes are processed here and fed to
other parts of the brain for storage
Works like a store room
Active during slow-wave sleep
Left damage- impacts verbal memory
Right damage- impacts visual memory and location
memory
Storage
Cerebellum
Forming and storing implicit memories created by
classical conditioning reflexes
Dual implicit and explicit memories explains infantile
amnesia
Inability to recall information prior to three years of age
The implicit reactions and skills we learned during
infancy reach far into our future, yet as adults we recall
nothing (explicitly) of our first three years.
Hippocampus one of the last brain structures to mature.
Retrieval
Occurs when information is brought to mind from
storage.
The ease with which information can be retrieved
depends of how efficiently it was encoded and stored.
Retrieval
Remembering is more than storage and encoding
Memory is:
Recall- A measure of memory in which a person must
retrieve information learned earlier, info not in our
conscious awareness.
Recognition-A measure of memory in which a person
need only identity items previously learned
Relearning-Measure of memory that assesses the
amount of time saved when learning material for a
second time
Learning occurs faster the second time around
Retrieval
Harry Bahrick
Studied high school graduates that were 25 years
removed
Had these graduates look at pictures from their
yearbook
Could not recall classmates out-right,
but 90% could recognize names and faces
Retrieval
Retrieval cues
Retrieving is like a spider web
Associate bits of information and these bits serve as retrieval
cues
Priming
The activation, often unconsciously, of particular associations
External contexts and internal emotion influence
retrieval
Context leads to retrieval
Greater recall when learning and testing context was the
same
Retrieval
Déjà vu:
Eerie sense that “I’ve experienced it before.” Cues
from current situation may subconsciously trigger
retrieval of an earlier experience.
Storage
Loftus and Loftus (1980) analyzed vivid memories and
found that flashbacks appeared to have been invented
and not relived as previously thought
Forgetting
Forgetting
Forgetting: refers to apparent loss of information
already encoded and stored in an individual's long
term memory
Forgetting
Amnesia- Loss of Memory
H.M. lost part of his brain due to surgery.
He could not form new memories but his
old memories were intact.
However he could still learn…
Able to grasp implicit but not explicit.
Forgetting
Jill Price Memory of every day since she was 14 years old
Forgetting
7 sins of memory (Daniel Schacter)
3 sins of forgetting
Absent mindedness
Transience- storage decay over time
Blocking- in accessibility of stored information
(encoding errors, storage errors, and retrieval
errors)
Forgetting
Forgetting Curve
Forgetting
3 sins of distortion
Misattribution- confusing source of information
Suggestibility- lingering effects of misinformation
Bias- belief colored recollections
1 sin of intrusion
Persistence- unwanted memories
Forgetting
Types of interference
Proactive: disruptive effect of prior learning on the recall
of new information
Retroactive: disruptive effect of new learning on the
recall of old information
Forgetting
Motivated Forgetting
People revise their own history
Repression: psychoanalytic theory, the basic defense
mechanism that banishes from consciousness anxietyarousing thoughts, feelings, and memories
Children’s Eyewitness Recall
Ceci and Bruck studied children and their memories
Using suggestive wording, researchers were able to make
students have false memories
Pre-schoolers overheard remark of rabbit getting loose in the
class (not true)
78% recalled seeing the rabbit
Children’s Eyewitness Recall
Can Children be eyewitnesses?
Yes
Other studies show that when given neutral words and
questioning techniques most children can respond with more
accurate recall
Repressed or constructed
memories of abuse
Therapist estimate 11% of the population have
repressed memories of sexual abuse
7 out of 10 report using hypnosis or drugs to help patient
recall repressed memories
What might be wrong with this idea?
Repressed or constructed
memories of abuse
Two sides
One side argues that repressed memories exist and
should be recalled
Other side argues repressed memories can be false
memories conjured up by thoughts the therapist places
in their minds
Repressed or constructed
memories of abuse
Both sides can agree on some things
Sexual abuse happens
Injustice happens
Forgetting happens
Recovered memories are common place
Memories prior to age three are unreliable
Memories recalled under the influence of
drugs/hypnosis are even more unreliable
Memories, whether real or false, can be emotionally
upsetting
Improving Memory
How can we improve our memory:
Study repeatedly
Make material meaningful
Activate retrieval cues
Use mnemonic devices
Minimize interference
Sleep more
Test your own knowledge
http://www.learner.org/resources/series142.html?pop=
yes&pid=1584
Amnesia
Two types:
Retrograde: Forget past memories or cannot recall past
memories
Anterograde: Cannot form new memories
Occurs due to head injury or disease
Children’s Eyewitness Recall
Another study children were asked to choose a card with
a story on it
After 10 weeks of interviews 58% of the preschoolers produced
false stories