Long Term Memory Flashcards
1
Q
MEMORY TAXONOMY
A
- simplified from human memory theory
WORKING MEMORY VS LTM - short term storage VS long term storage
EPISODIC VS SEMANTIC/REFERENCE - first day of Uni VS knowing Rescorla-Wagner is an associative learning model
2
Q
FORGETTING
A
- target memories could be lost due to:
PROACTIVE INTERFERENCE - from info acquired PRE target
RETROACTIVE INTERFERENCE - from info acquired POST target
DECAY - passage of time
3
Q
LONG-TERM MEMORY
A
- focus on retention over hour intervals/days/longer > minutes
- big issues = what transformations in memory trace take place between original encoding/final storage/if forgotten memories are lost completely/just become inaccessible
- forgetting should be considered as failure to retrieve; memory still there but animal is unable to access it under present conditions
4
Q
CONSOLIDATION
A
- initial memory trace = fragile/relatively short-term; needs to be transformed/consolidated into more durable trace for long term
- many studies looking at this used avoidance learning in shuttle box; rat is typically trained to move from one side to another to avoid shock
- lends itself to idea of forgotten memories being irretrievably lost
5
Q
SHUTTLE BOX APARATUS
A
- rat has to move from one side to the other to avoid shock
- if it stays on one side too long (30/60s) it gets shocked
- must hop low hurdle in middle of box to get between the halves
6
Q
PHYSIOLOGICAL DISRUPTION OF CONSOLIDATION
A
- several types of physiological trauma prevent learning ONLY if occur shortly post stimulus/reward
DUNCAN (1949) - electroconvulsive shock (ECS); sudden heating/cooling/drugs/concussive impact (ie. American football)
- so post learning shuttle response to avoid shock -> ECS given shortly post training disrupts performance post delay
- ECS given post delay/just before test = less effective
7
Q
DUNCAN (1949): AVOIDANCE
A
- animal put back in shuttle box post complete rest; observed if shuttling as before
- higher scores = better at avoiding shock
- ECS given just post training (20s) -> poor memory
- training/ECS time interval lengthens -> less effect
- 1-14 hours = same as controls (no ECS)
- ECS disrupts memory transfer of learned response (shuttling) to LTM (consolidation) -> no ECS effect
- implication = consolidation of memory disrupted by ECS given shortly post learning -> gone permanently as never enters LTM storage
8
Q
RETRIEVAL
A
- animal must retrieve memory to use it
- studies indicate that most forgetting should be viewed as failure to retrieve > storage loss
- most impressive = reactivation experiments; apparently lost memories = successfully retrieved following reminder treatment
- poses difficulties for consolidation theory; if memory not consolidated, how can it be retrieved?
9
Q
RETRIEVAL: GORDON & MOWRER (1981)
A
- animals trained to avoid shock; left for 3 days so forgetting = expected; final test given under 3 conditions:
0 = tested; mean latency to shuttle = long via forgetting
15 = held for 15s on one box side to remind previous training; animals shuttle almost immediately upon release; no further training indicates memory effect
75 = held for 75s; shuttle slower; holding reminded of training BUT continuing to extinguishes fear - reactivation by being exposed to training context can restore lost memories post ECS aka. paradox; evidence for both arguments
10
Q
ANIMAL LTM CAPACITY
A
VAUGHAN & GREENE
- picture recognition experiment w/pigeons
- random pseudo-concept task = slides of trees arbitrarily divided into positive/negative original training w/40 positives/40 negatives
- new slides introduced once old ones mastered
- successful training up to 640 slides
- birds trained w/320 slides rested for 2 years
- re-testing = forgetting BUT quick recovery
11
Q
EPISODIC MEMORY (?)
A
- less clear whether we can claim episodic memory in animals
ROBERTS (2022) - claims animals are “stuck in time”; cannot perform mental time travel
- BUT some claim otherwise…
12
Q
EPISODIC MEMORY: CLAYTON & DICKINSON
A
- claimed that food-storing birds (ie. scrub jays) show true episodic memory
- trained scrub jays to cache food in special sand-trays w/unique lego landmarks
- labs show they remember:
1. what they stored (waxworms/peanuts); recover worms > peanuts as pref
2. where they stored them
3. when they stored them (recover peanuts > worms if stored 4+ hours before as worms perish)