Interference theory Flashcards
What is interference?
Explanation for forgetting as one memory disrupts the ability to recall another, most likely occurs when 2 memories have similar meaning
What is proactive interference?
Past learning interferes with current attempts to learn something
What is retroactive interference?
Current attempts to learn interfere with past learning
What is the evidence of interference theory?
- Underwood and Postman (1960)
- Paired associate learning task to test effects of interference
- Learn series of word pairs and presented with first word (stimulus word) and then the paired word (response word)
- Given another list of word pairs with the same stimulus word but different response word
- Recall of response word is poor and affected by retro and proactive interference
- Only present when same stimulus word is used in both lists
Who found interference is most strongest when the materials are similar?
Mcgeoch and McDonald (1931)
Why is the research artificial?
Low ecological validity - uses artificial lists of words which don’t relate to everyday memory. PP’s may lack motivation and allow interference to appear stronger than they are
Is interference temporary or does it actually cause a memory to disappear?
- Ceraso (1967)
- If memory was tested after 24 hours, recognition showed recovery whereas recall remained the same
- Interference is temporarily not available rather than being lost
How are some people more affected by interference than others?
- Kane and Engle (2000)
- Individuals with a better WM were less susceptible to proactive interference
- Having a greater WM span means having better resources to consciously control processing the effects of proactive interference