Intro to Memory Part 2 PPT
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Transcript Intro to Memory Part 2 PPT
Memory
Chapter 7
Continued…
How is knowledge organized?
Clustering: the tendency to remember
similar or related items in groups
Conceptual Hierarchy: multilevel
classification system based on
common properties among items
How is knowledge organized?
Schemas: an organized cluster of
knowledge about a particular object
or event abstracted from previous
experience with the object or event
People are more likely to remember things
that are consistent with the schemas than
things that are not and people sometimes
exhibit better recall of things that violate
their schema-based expectations
How is knowledge organized?
Semantic Networks: consists of nodes
representing concepts, joined together
by pathways that link related concepts
Proven to be useful in explaining why
thinking about one word can make closely
related words easier to remember
Semantic Networks
Retrieval
Tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon: the
temporary inability to remember
something you know, accompanied by a
feeling that it’s just out of reach
Usually happens about once a week –
especially with names
Clearly constitutes a failure in retrieval
Retrieval
Retrieval Cues: stimuli that help gain access to
memories
Reinstating the Context of an Event: this is
trying to recall a memory by putting yourself
back in the context in which it occurred – this
involves working with context cues to aid
retrieval
Context Cues: often facilitate the retrieval of
information
Used successfully in legal matters and investigations
Misinformation Effect
Reconstructing Memories and the
Misinformation Effect: when you retrieve
information from long-term memory you aren’t
able to pull up a “mental videotape” that
provides an exact replay
to some degree, memories are just reconstructions of
the past that may be distorted and may include details
that did not actually occur
Misinformation Effect
Elizabeth Loftus
Researched the misinformation effect and
found that reconstructive distortions show up
very frequently in eyewitness testimony
ァ 3 Stages
1. View event
2. Exposed to information about event, some of
which is misleading
3. The recall of the original event is tested to
see if the post-event misinformation alters the
memory of the actual event
Misinformation Effect
Ex subjects shown a video of an accident and
then “grilled” to provide testimony
Biasing information was introduced
Words such as “hit” and “smashed into” were
used
A week later, recall of the event was tested and
people who were asked questions with vivid
imagery words like “smashed into” remembered
seeing things like broken glass (which wasn’t
present)
Why are there distortions in eyewitness testimony?
People’s Schema’s put words like “smashed into”
and broken glass or tons of damage together in the
same category
Measures of Forgetting
Retention:
the proportion of material retained (remembered)
Recall:
Reproduction of information on your own without
any cues
Recognition:
The ability to select previously learned
information from an array of options
Relearning:
memorizing information a second time to
determine how much time or how many practice
trials are saved by having learned it before
Why We Forget?
Ineffective Coding
Information may have
never been inserted
into memory properly
Decay Theory
Forgetting occurs
because memory traces
fade over time
Can we really forget
Pseudoforgetting:
you can’t really forget
what you haven’t
learned
Another name for
Ineffective Coding
what has been stored in
Long Term Memory
permanently?
Why We Forget?
Interference Theory
Retroactive Interference:
new info impairs the
retention of previously
learned material
Proactive Interference:
retention of previously
learned material
interferes with the
learning of new material
Why We Forget?
Retrieval Failure
A mismatch occurs
between retrieval
cues and the
encoding
Motivated Forgetting
People keep embarassing
or painful events buried in
the unconscious
Also called Repression
Think About It…
When it comes to school & your study
habits, what causes you to forget the
most?
Discuss your answers with the class.
Are there similarities among your
answers? Why?