Module_11vs9_Final
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Transcript Module_11vs9_Final
Types of Memory
INTRODUCTION
Definitions
Memory
○ ability to retain information over time through
three processes: encoding, storing, and
retrieving
○ not copies but representations of the world that
vary in accuracy and are subject to error and
bias
Encoding
○ refers to making mental representations of
information so that it can be placed into memory
INTRODUCTION
(CONT’D)
Definitions
Storing
○ process of placing encoded information
into relatively permanent mental
storage for later recall
Retrieving
○ process of getting or recalling
information that has been placed into
short- or long-term storage
THREE TYPES OF
MEMORY
Sensory memory
Initial process that receives and holds
environmental information in its raw form
for a brief period of time, from an instant
to several seconds
Short-term memory
Also called working memory; refers to
another process that can hold only a
limited amount of information an average
of seven items, from 2 to 30 seconds
Long-term memory
Process of storing almost unlimited
amounts of information over long periods
of time
THREE TYPES OF
MEMORY (CONT’D)
Memory processes
Sensory memory
○ don’t pay attention, information is forgotten
○ pay attention, information is automatically
transferred into short-term memory
Short-term memory
○ don’t pay attention, information isn’t
encoded and is forgotten
Long-term memory
○ encoded information will remain on a
relatively permanent basis
THREE TYPES OF
MEMORY (CONT’D)
SENSORY MEMORY:
RECORDING
Iconic memory
Form of sensory memory that
automatically holds visual information for
about a quarter of a second or more; as
soon as you shift your attention, the
information disappears
Icon means image
Echoic memory
Form of sensory memory that holds
auditory information for 1 to 2 seconds
Holds speech sounds long enough to know
that sequences of certain sounds form
words
SENSORY MEMORY:
RECORDING (CONT’D)
Functions of sensory memory
Prevents being overwhelmed
Gives decision time
Provides stability, playback, and
recognition
SHORT-TERM MEMORY:
WORKING
Short-term, or working, memory
Process of holding a limited amount of
information (an average of seven items)
for a limited period of time (2 to 30
seconds)
Short duration can be lengthened by
repeating or rehearsing the information
Two features
Limited duration
Maintenance rehearsal
○ practice of intentionally repeating
information so that it remains in short-term
memory longer
SHORT-TERM MEMORY:
WORKING (CONT’D)
Interference
Results when new information enters
short-term memory and overwrites or
pushes out information that’s already
there
Chunking
Combining separate items of
information into a larger unit, or
chunk, and then remembering these
chunks rather than individual items
SHORT-TERM MEMORY:
WORKING (CONT’D)
Functions of short-tem memory
Attending
○ selectively attend to relevant information
and disregard everything else
Rehearsing
○ allows you to hold information for a short
period of time until you decide what to do
with it
Storing
○ helps store or encode information in longterm memory
THREE TYPES OF
MEMORY (CONT’D)
LONG-TERM MEMORY:
STORING
Putting information into long-term
memory
Encoding
○ transferring information from short- to longterm memory by paying attention to it,
repeating it, or forming new associations
Long-term memory
○ process of storing almost unlimited amounts
of information over long periods of time
Retrieving
○ process of selecting information from longterm memory and transferring it to shortterm memory
LONG-TERM MEMORY:
STORING (CONT’D)
Separate memory systems
Primacy versus recency
Primacy effect
○ better recall or retention of information
presented at the beginning of a task
Recency effect
○ better recall or retention of information
presented at the end of a task
Primary-recency effect
○ better recall of information presented at the
beginning and end of a task
LONG-TERM MEMORY:
STORING (CONT’D)
Declarative versus procedural or
nondeclarative
Declarative memory
○ involves memories for facts or events, such
as scenes, stories, words, conversations,
faces, or daily events
○ aware of and can recall or retrieve these
kinds of memories
Semantic memory
○ type of declarative memory that involves
knowledge of facts, concepts, words,
definitions, and language rules
LONG-TERM MEMORY:
STORING (CONT’D)
Declarative versus procedural or
nondeclarative
Episodic memory
○ type of declarative memory that involves
knowledge of specific events, personal
experiences (episodes), or activities, such as
naming or describing favorite restaurants,
movies, songs, habits, or hobbies
LONG-TERM MEMORY:
STORING (CONT’D)
Declarative versus procedural or
nondeclarative
Procedural or nondeclarative memory
○ involves memories for motor skills (playing
tennis), some cognitive skills (learning to
read), and emotional behaviors learned
through classical conditioning
○ can’t recall or retrieve procedural memories
ENCODING: TRANSFERING
Encoding
Acquiring information or storing it in
memory by changing it into neural or
memory codes
Two kinds of encoding
○ Automatic encoding
transfer of information from short- to long-term
memory without effort or awareness (personal
events, interesting facts, skills/habits)
○ Effortful encoding
transfer of information from short- to long-term
memory by working hard to rehearse the
information or by making associations
ENCODING: TRANSFERING
(CONT’D)
Rehearsing and encoding
Maintenance rehearsal
○ simply repeating or rehearsing information
rather than forming any new associations
○ works better for short-term memory
Elaborative rehearsal
○ using effort to actively make meaningful
associations between new information that
you wish to remember and old or familiar
information already stored in long-term
memory
ENCODING: TRANSFERING
(CONT’D)
Levels of processing
Theory says that remembering depends on
how information is encoded
Information encoded at a shallow level
results in poor recall
Deeper and deepest processing: encode by
making new association
REPRESSED MEMORIES
Definition of repressed memory
Process by which the mind pushes a
memory of some threatening or traumatic
event deep into the unconscious mind
Implanting false memories
Studies show that a false suggestion can
grow into a vivid, detailed, and believable
personal memory
UNUSUAL MEMORIES
Photographic memory
Occurs in adults; ability to form sharp, detailed
visual images after examining a picture or
page for a short period of time and to recall
the entire image at a later date
Eidetic imagery
Form of photographic memory that occurs in
children; the ability to examine a picture or
page for 10 to 30 seconds and then for several
minutes hold in one’s mind a detailed visual
image of the material
UNUSUAL MEMORIES
(CONT’D)
Flashbulb memories
Vivid recollections, usually in great detail,
of dramatic or emotionally charged
incidents that are of interest to the person
Encoded effortlessly and may last for long
periods of time
UNUSUAL MEMORIES
(CONT’D)