explainations for forgetting - interferance theory Flashcards
what is interferance
when two pieces of information block each other resulting in one/both memories being distorted/forgotten
what is proactive interferance
older Memories interferes with the new
what is retroactive interferance
new information interferes with the old
who conducted research on similarity
McGeoch and McDonald (1931)
what was McGeoch and McDonald’s research procedure
Studies retroactive interference by changing the amount of similairy between two sets of materials
-PPs learnt a list of 10 words, then had to learn a new one involving e.g.
-Synonyms, antonyms, unrelated words, three digit numbers etc (six groups)
what were McGeoch and McDonald’s findings
most similar material produced the worst recall
strength - real world interferance
- Baddeley and Hitch- Asked rugby players to recall the names of teams they played against
-Players who played the most games (most interference) had the poorest recall.
limitation - rare situations
- Interference is unusual, conditions necessary are rare e.g. two similar memories
limitation - can be overcome
-Tulving and Psotka- pps learnt multiple word lists
-the more lists learnt= worse recall became.
-Used cues- recall rose again (70%)
interference- only causes temporary loss.
strength - drug studies
-Coenen and van Luijtelaar (1997)
-Words learnt under influence of Diazepam-recall was poor.
-but when words learnt before taking drug- recall was better than placebo.
-Drug facillitated recall of material learnt beforehand.
-Wixted - drug prevents new info from reaching parts of brain involved in processing memories so interference cannot occur.