LTM: Autobiographical memory Flashcards

1
Q

autobiographical memory

A

the memory for what happens in your life
* how personal experiences are recorded in your brain

  • combo of semantic and episodic
  • elements linked to events but also elements that require inferences based on knowledge

emotion enhances memory consolidation

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2
Q

childhood amnesia

A

not being able to remember anything before age 3/4

  • used to think this happened because young brains are so immature that early memories are not stored
  • but researchers began testing children as young as 9 months and they do have memory

research shows that amnesia for events before age 3 begins at about 7 years of age
* 5 year olds can remember but fading starts at 7 and memories are gone at 10

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3
Q

theories for childhood amnesia

A

brain connections for early memories are there but we can’t retrieve them

or we can’t access them because the way that kids think about the world is just qualitatively different from what you’re using now
* no framework for accessing early memories

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4
Q

childhood memories that survive

A

certain memories survive childhood amnesia
* highly emotional memories

  • develop a story around the event so parents will often play a role in maintaining memories by giving shape and structure to events

some researchers posit that there may be an evolutionary component to this type of memory

some people say they stick around because it is also emotional for the family so it lives on as a story the family tells which is a confound

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5
Q

memories throughout lifetime

A
  • there is a social component to memory
  • parents help kids remember stories from their childhood
  • traditionally, looked at how recall faired when two people recalled together (eg: waitlists)
  • generally did poorer than when recalling solo
  • however, recent research also shows that long-term partners develop inter-connected memory systems

memories live within our social exchanges with other people

memory boosts to older adults is greater when recalling information with a lifelong partner vs solo

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6
Q

socially distributed cognitive systems

A

recalling information together led to an increased ability to recall autobiographical information

compared to a solo session:
* more information and new information recalled
* richer more vivid descriptios of events
* information from one partner often puts things in a new light for the other

exchange between the two people acts as retrieval cues for each other

memories more vivid and descriuptive when recalling about the partner

each perspective allows the other person to recall info that they wouldnt have otherwise

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7
Q

memory and emotion

A

people tend to have better memory for emotional life events
* like emotional public events or traumatic personal experiences

emotion is thought to enhance consolidation of memories

researchers have found neurologic links between memory and emotion
* amygdala

process of memories becoming more stable and independent from the hippocampus happens faster and connections are more stable

emotion speeds up and enhances connections

ability to encode and recall memory and emotion is strongly associated with activity of amygdala

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8
Q

how emotion could affect memory

A

attentional focus and intensity

encoding depth and elaboration

degree of rehearsal and review

rate or extent of consolidation

affect/emotion acts as retrieval cue

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9
Q

flashbulb memories

A

we all have some memories that are so vivid it seems that we can recall it perfectly

  • linked to emotional events to study the enhancement of memory

emotional memory: recorded vividly like a camera

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10
Q

flashbulb memories continued

A

specific type of autobiographical memory
* memory of our own history

flashbulb memory: memory for the moment of learning about a emotional or surprising event

thought as a snapshot in your mind

has personal significance and can be positive or negative

researchers ask “Where were you when you heard about:
* 9/11
* Red sox winning
* trump elected as president
* pandemic

Are they really more accurate than other memories?

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11
Q

downfalls of flashbulb memories

A

originally thought that flashbulb memories were complete, accurate, and resistant to forgetting
* because people reported such vivid images

  • originally thought to have a high degree of detail that does not fade over time

studied people downtown and 5 miles away from 9/11 attack
* downtown group remembered more info and had increased activity in amygdala
* midtown group did not show any differences between 9/11 and their other memories

conclusion: witnessing an event can heighten emotions associated with the event and produce lasting memories

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12
Q

what do flashbulb memories depend on

A

prior knowledge
* aiding in relation to the event and existing memory structures

personal importance
* great relevance personally

emotional state
* emotional reaction of the person

overt rehearsal
* retelling of the story often linked to the flashbulb memory

emotion helps to fit memory into a narrative

knowledge of the events helps with personal recall of the event

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13
Q

flashbulb memories

A

label may be misleading: implies photographic properties

some researchers have argued for a new label
* memories of personal circumstances

flashbulb implies that there is a photograph in our head
* but detauls aren’t always accurate
* not actual photographs

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14
Q

Hympermnesia

A

superior autobiographical memory

  • can remember events that happened to them in great detail years later
  • still experience childhood amnesia
  • don’t show ay other types of superior memory performance
  • wouldn’t be better at memorizing list of words

overlap with OCD but it does not affect everyday functioning so it is not treated as a disorder

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15
Q

Adrenaline and memory

A

role of adrenaline in making strong memories

  • emotion releases adrenaline and sears memories into brain for stronger memories
  • certain amount of forgetting is crucial to our ability to think
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16
Q

difference between “S” and hypermnesia

A

“S”
* vivid memories bc associate senses with memory
* synesthesia
* memorized random facts
* couldn’t make generalizations like peoples faces in different lighting

Hypermnesia
* semantic memory works in same way
* everyday events can be held onto in the same way that normal people hold on to emotional events