Chapter 7 Flashcards
Memory
Retention of information over time
Encoding
Forming a memory code
Storage
Maintaining the information in memory over time
Retrieval
Recovering information from memory stores
Attention
Focusing awareness on a narrowed range of stimuli or events
Need attention in order to form memory (that can be put in short term memory at least)
Absentmindedness
A lapse in attention that results in memory failure
Pseudoforgetting
Can’t recall information because it was never encoded well due to a lack of attention
Failures in prospective memory
Failure in remembering to remember something/an intention in the future, such as an action or event
Ways to enhance encoding
- Levels of processing → Deeper level of processing = enhanced encoding/better recall (Structural/Visual < Phonetic/Phonological < Semantic)
- Visual imagery
- Words that can be visualized and are concrete (ie. juggler, house, ball, dress) are easier to memorize than low imagery words (ie. truth, necessary, quality). - Self-referent encoding
- Deciding how or whether information is personally relevant
- Promotes additional elaboration and additional organization of the information
- If something relates to us or things we already know, we can remember it better
Sensory memory
- preserves information in its original sensory form for a brief time, usually only a fraction of a second
- very temporary
- we retain each frame of a movie in our sensory memory for an extremely brief period of time after it disappears, but this allows us to see the frames blending together into a seamless whole and thus perceive motion
- includes iconic memory and echoic memory
Iconic memory
- Visual sensory memory
- Eidetic imagery: Photographic memory; unusually good iconic memory
Echoic memory
Auditory sensory memory; lasts as long as 5-10 seconds (longer than iconic memory)
Working memory
- a limited capacity storage system that temporarily maintains and stores information by providing an interface between perception, memory, and action
- Closely related to short-term memory
Short term memory
- a limited capacity store that can maintain unrehearsed information for up to approx. 20 seconds
- closely related to working memory
- can hold 5-9 items
Long term memory
relatively enduring (from minutes to years) retention of information stored regarding our facts, experiences, and skills
Sperling’s study
- Method:
- 12 letters are flashed on the screen for 50 milliseconds
Screen goes blank
- A tone is sounded within 250 milliseconds of the flash as a signal to recall letters from one of the rows - Findings:
- Subject is able to recall 3 out of 4 letters from that row - Conclusions:
- Participants had access to all 12 letters in their memories, but our iconic memories fade so quickly that we can’t access all the information before it disappears
- We can only recite 3-4 letters before the information from our sensory memory is gone, which is why we can’t recite all 12 of the letters that flash onto the screen, but can accurate recite ~3 from a randomly selected row
Magic number
- the span of short-term memory, according to George Miller: seven plus or minus two pieces of information
Duration of short-term memory
- Lloyd and Margaret Peterson
- Participants were presented with lists of three letters each
- They made the participants wait 3-18 seconds before recalling the letters, counting backwards by 3’s while they waited (to present rehearsal)
- After about 10 to 15 seconds, most participants did no better than chance
- Conclusion: Short-term memory is brief; no longer than 20 seconds
LTM vs STM
LTM has much larger capacity than STM
LTM has much longer retention than STM
LTM involves different kinds of mistakes than STM
Semantic errors for LTM (poodle vs terrier) and acoustic errors for STM (poodle vs noodle)
Chunking
organizing information into meaningful groupings, allowing us to extend the span of short-term memory
This method is used by expert chess players to memorize chess positions
Professional chess players can recall LEGAL chess positions more easily than beginners
Professional chess players are no better than beginners at recalling ILLEGAL/UNREALISTIC chess positions
Suggests that the professionals use chunking to remember the chess positions
Rehearsal
Repeating information to extend the duration of retention in short-term memory and promote the likelihood of transfer to long-term memory
Maintenance rehearsal: repeating stimuli in their original form to retain them in short-term memory
Elaborative rehearsal: linking stimuli to each other in a meaningful way to improve retention of information in short-term memory
Capacity test for STM
Digit span
Read increasingly long rows of numbers, one number at a time, then close eyes and write out the numbers from memory
On average, people can remember 7 numbers (plus or minus two)
Describe the different components of working memory
Episodic buffer: interface between working and long-term memory, temporary limited capacity storage space for the integration of information from other modules
Phonological loop: allows for recitation of information
Visuo-Spatial Sketch Pad: temporarily hold and manipulate visual images
Central executive: coordinates the actions of other modules; controls, focuses, divides attention
Two types of long term memory
Explicit and implicit memory
Explicit memory
Explicit Memory: Involves intentional recollection of factual information or previous experiences
Semantic memory: General knowledge not tied to the time when the information was learned
Episodic memory: Chronological, temporally dated, recollections of personal experiences
Consciously aware
Assessed directly
Assessed by recall/recognition
Affected by age, drugs, amnesia, retention interval
Implicit memory
Implicit Memory: Involves memories we don’t deliberately or consciously remember
Procedural memory: Memories of how to execute specific actions, skills and/or operations
Priming: The ability to identity a stimulus more easily or quickly when we’ve previously encountered similar stimuli
Conditioning
Habituation
Not consciously aware
Assessed indirectly
Assessed by relearning measures
Not affected by age, drugs, amnesia, retention interval
Describe the span and duration of long term memory.
Estimated to hold 500 encyclopedias (1500 pages each) of information
Duration can range from minutes to years to an entire lifetime