Explanations for forgetting: Retrieval failure Flashcards

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1
Q

What is the definition of retrieval?

A

Recall of information previously stored in memory.

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2
Q

Why may forgetting occur?

A

Due to insufficient cues at the time of recall. The memory has been stored, but you don’t have the right cues to access it again.

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3
Q

What is the Encoding Specificity Principle devised by Tulving?

A

For a cue to be helpful, it has to be present at encoding and retrieval. If cues are different or absent, there will be some forgetting.

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4
Q

What is context-dependent forgetting?

A

Recall depends on external cues. e.g = weather, place, sounds

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5
Q

What is state-dependent forgetting?

A

Recall depends on internal cues. e.g = feeling upset, being drunk

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6
Q

Who completed the research into context-dependent forgetting?

A

Godden and Baddeley

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7
Q

What was the procedure of Godden and Baddeley’s study?

A
  • Used divers to see how learning on land affected work under water.
  • Had to learn a list of words on land, underwater then had to recall on land or underwater.
    4 conditions:
  • Land and land
  • Land and underwater
  • Underwater and land
  • Underwater and underwater
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8
Q

What were the findings of Godden and Baddeley’s study?

A
  • Accurate recall was 40% lower when learning and recall conditions did not match.
  • When cues available during learning different to those available during recall, this led to retrieval failure.
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9
Q

What was the procedure of the state-dependent forgetting? - Carter and Cassaday

A
  • Participants got antihistamines to produce a drowsy state.
  • Learnt a list of words then had to recall in one of 2 states.
    4 conditions:
  • Drugs and drugs
  • Drugs and no drugs
  • No drugs and drugs
  • No drugs and no drugs
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10
Q

What were the findings of Carter and Cassaday’s study?

A

When the state during learning was different to recall, recall was significantly worse.

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11
Q

What is one strength of retrieval cues? - Real world application

A
  • Although the effect of cues on forgetting is not very strong, they are still worth paying attention to.
  • When we have trouble remembering something, we should recall the environment in which you learnt it.
  • Research can remind us of strategies we use in the real world to improve recall.
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12
Q

What is a strength of the retrieval failure explanation? - Range of evidence

A
  • Godden/Baddeley and Carter/Cassaday are just 2 examples.
  • Evidence shows retrieval failure occurs in real world situations as well as highly-controlled lab studies.
  • Eysenck and Keane argue retrival failure may be the most significant cause of forgetting in LTM.
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