Transcript Chapter 7
Psychology Chapter 7
Memory
Section 1: Three Kinds of Memory
Memory – is the process by which we
recollect prior experiences, information,
and skills learned in the past
3 kinds of memory – Episodic, Generic,
and Procedural
Episodic Memory
Episodic memory – memory of a specific
event. The event took place in the
person’s presence, or the person
experienced an event.
Ex: Last meal, Quiz
Flashbulb memory – recall events in
specific details. An event so surprising or
significant
Ex: 9/11, first love, an accomplishment.
Generic Memory
Generic memory – General Knowledge.
You do not know when you attained the
knowledge, but you have it.
Ex: George Washington, Basic Math,
Alphabet, oxygen.
Procedural Memory
Procedural Memory – a skill that you have
learned in the past.
Ex. Riding a bicycle, throwing a ball,
typing, driving a car.
The skill stays with you for years/maybe
life (even if you have not preformed the
skill in a long time)
Pg 155 Q 1-3.
Section 2: Three Processes of
Memory
Three ways humans process information
Encoding
Storage
Retrieval
Encoding
Encoding – is the translation of information into
a form in which it can be stored
store information in brain.
Most information is received through a physical
form (sound/ light). When we encode it, we
convert the physical stimulation into
psychological forms that can be mentally
represented.
Three ways to encode
Encoding Continued
Visual Codes – memorize information by
trying to form a picture in your mind.
Acoustic Codes – read the information,
then repeat to yourself.
Semantic Codes – Make sense of the
information.
Definition – relating to meaning.
Ex: make a phrase or sentence out of the
information
Storage
Storage – second process – maintenance
of encoded information.
Maintenance rehearsal – keep saying the
information over and over again. Trying
not to lose the information – poor way to
put information in long term memory.
Ex: phone numbers, Actors.
Storage Continued
Elaborative Rehearsal – take new
information and relate it to information
that is already well known. Effective for
long term memory
Ex: using new vocabulary words in
sentences
Storage Continued
Organizational systems – Memories that
you store become organized and arranged
in your mind for future use.
Ex: history – chronological order –
presidents – what they did.
Filing errors – put information in wrong
area (file) or information is not complete
on a subject.
Retrieval
Retrieval - third process – locating stored
information and returning it into conscious
thought.
Context-dependent memory – memories
that come back to you in a certain place
Ex: swimmer test, school tests, crime
scene.
Retrieval Continued
State-Dependent Memory – memories that
come back to you in an emotional state.
Happy = happy memories
Sad = sad memories
If you learned something in a certain
emotional state you will remember it that
emotional state. Even on Drugs
Retrieval Continued
Tip-of-the-tongue – When you know
something but cannot seem to verbalize it.
Person can come up with
acoustic/semantic clues.
Ex: songs
Pg. 160 Q 1-4.
Section 3: Three Stages of Memory
You do not store every piece of
information that you see.
Stages of memory
Sensory Memory
Short Term Memory STM
Long Term Memory LTM
Sensory Memory
1st
Stage, immediate, initial recordings of
Information that goes through our senses.
Decays within a fraction of a second.
Iconic memory – visual memory – seeing
–snapshots.
Eidetic memory – Photographic memory
5% of children have this. Decays with age.
Echoic memory – audio memory – easier
than iconic memory.
Short Term Memory STM
2nd
stage, this memory last for a couple of
seconds. Fades rapidly after that
To get information into your STM you
need to pay attention to iconic/echoic
memories.
STM is called working memory. You use it
a great deal of the time – when you think
STM Continued
Primacy effect - easier to recall the initial
items in a series of items
See them first and can rehearse more
Recency effect – easier to recall the last
items in a series of items.
The items are fresh in your mind
STM Continued
Chunking – organization of items into
manageable units
EX: phone numbers 123-4567
Average person can handle 7 items
Few people can remember more than nine
Businesses try to get repeated numbers or
spell words. 555-7788/ 786-JOES.
STM Continued
STM can only handle so much information
at a time.
Interference – when too much information
comes in to your STM and replaces old
information in your STM.
Long Term Memory LTM
3rd
stage and final stage.
Get information in your LTM by using
maintenance rehearsal or by elaborative
rehearsal.
Your LTM holds more information than a
computer. Smell, pictures, touch, taste,
and sound.
LTM Continued
Capacity – Psychologist said there is no
capacity to our LTM.
Memory as Reconstructive – we
reconstruct our memories in our own
views, using bits and pieces.
Explains different views of the same
event.
LTM Continued
Schemas – mental representation that we
form of the world by organizing bits of
information into knowledge.
Wording Ex: poor/welfare
Cars smashed/hit.
Q 1-3 pg 166
Section 4: Forgetting and Memory
Improvement
Forgetting is the opposite of memory.
You can forget at any of the 3 stages of
memory. Sensory, STM, LTM.
Basic memory tasks are:
Recognition
Recall
Relearning
Basic Memory Tasks
Recognition – identifying objects or events
that have been encountered before. Easy
Ex: multiple choice test.
Recall – Bringing information back to
mind. You do this by reconstructing your
memories.
Ex: remembering a list of numbers, using
pairs.
Memory loss occurs within an hour.
Basic Memory Tasks
Relearning – If you forget something, so
can relearn it quick.
Ex: Math problems from high school.
Different Kinds of Forgetting
Interference – too much information in
STM
Decay – fading away of a memory
Repression – when you push out painful,
unpleasant, and disturbing memories that
make us feel anxious, guilt, or shame.
Controversial in the psychology world.
Different ways of Forgetting
(Amnesia)
Amnesia – severe memory loss caused by
brain injury, shock, fatigue, illness, or
repression
Infantile Amnesia – when you cannot
remember information your early
childhood. (before 6 years old) Episodic.
Why: repression because of boring
memories. Brain is undeveloped. No
language skills.
Amnesia
Antergrade Amnesia – memory loss from
trauma that prevents a person from
forming new memories
Ex: blow to the head, brain surgery,
electric shock
Retrograde Amnesia – is when people
forget the time period leading up to an
traumatic event.
Ex: sports injury, car accidents.
Improving Memory
Drill and practice – repeat information
until you memorize it.
Ex: flash cards, saying information aloud.
Relate to things you know – helps because
you think deeply about the new and old
material
Ex: spelling, world languages.
Improving Memory
Form unusual associations – make things
humorous/ think outside the box.
Ex: sn = tin. Snake in a tin can haha. Number of
rooms in a house = the peoples names living in
the house.
Construct links between information
Mnemonic devices – systems for remembering
information
Ex. Never eat shredded wheat , HOMES, roy g.
biv.