Midterm 2 Flashcards
Describe the case of HM and KC
HM had anterograde amnesia where he could still learn new skills like riding a bike but couldn’t form new memories
Kc had both retrograde and anterograde amnesia (lost all memory’s and can’t form new memories) due to an accident. He’s no longer the same person without those lived experiences. Semantic memory was not lost (general memory/facts about the world).No memory of where he grew up but knows the town
-he has no experiences (personality shifts may happen)
Describe the three basic aspects to memory processes (all three aspects that are necessary for remembering)
-failure in any one of the stages results in forgetting
- acquisition/encoding
(how are memories formed)
-Take in info in such a way that it will get stuck in long-term memory system
2 retention and storage
(how are memories saved?)
3 retrieval
- may have retrieval errors (it’s encoded but can’t retrieve it in the moment)
-how are memories accessed and remembered
Describe the Modal model of memory
Information moves through three systems by a variety of mental processes and mechanisms (e.g. attention and rehearsal)
- three systems: sensory memory, short-term memory and long-term memory
- Ackinson and Shiffrin 1968
What is short term memory
A store of info currently being used or to be used soon a.k.a. “working memory”
- instantly and easily accessed
- limited capacity (7+/- 2 bits of info)ex phone #s
- George Miller discovered short term memory and the magic number seven. You can’t increase the span of seven items but you can use chunking to increase the span efficiency of short term memory
- keep info in your head active and hold it until you need it, there’s little space but this allows for a quick retrieval of info when you need it
Describe the principle of Chunking
A chunk is a quantity of information but not a fixed quantity.
-You can increase the amount of information remembered by putting more into each chunk
-allows you to store the same number of chunks more information in total (less strain on working memory)
Ex. Chunk numbers of your credit card together, 536-1957 -read the last part as a year/chunk of four numbers
-May be specific to the stimuli
Describe the two tests of short term memory
- Simple span test/digit span test
-older test
-passive test
-test of storage ( pure)
(how much can you hold)
-Central executive does less work - Complex fancast/reading span
- newer test
- active test
- test of storage and processing efficiency
- Central executive does more work
Why is short term memory now being called working memory
Short term memory is the old term and signifies holding information
-working memory suggests we are active processors (we’re not just holding information but actively processing and transforming information at same time as remembering it)
Describe the Baddeley and hitch model
- working memory is not a single entity, but a system
- Central executive: not unlimited,(can I make one of the slave systems do this work?)
- > multi-purpose processor (work on many different tasks)-> high-level work
- > coordinates tasks (offloaded to other systems)
- Two slave systems
- > Phonological loop (sound based code) a.k.a. rehearsal or Articulary Loop
- > Visiospatial sketchpad (cannot be done verbally. We like language-based code and therefore the phonological system is bigger/well-developed compared to Visiospatial sketchpad) -when presented with a picture, we will transform visual spatial image into sound base code (unless it’s an abstract picture) and put it in articulatory loop or inner ear
Describe long-term memory
- Long term storage of information (mental “reference” library)
- fast in size, perhaps limitless?
- Slower rate of forgetting
- accessibility: must be searched; info not instantly accessible (so much more stuff in long-term memory compared to other systems- have to file through)
- most information lies dormant until you start looking for it (what did you do for your six birthday”?)
What’s in long-term memory? (3)
- Semantic memory
- generalize world knowledge/facts you’ve learned (i.e. provinces of Canada )
2 episodic memory
-personally experienced; autobiographical (remember learning about the provinces of Canada in grade6 and you can picture your teacher pointing to map, you member feeling bored)
3 procedural memory
- very different than above
- how to do things (know how to ride a bike, how to move your body and balance)
Relate the three types of long-term memory to consciousness and brain-damage
- hard to convey procedural memory because they are less available to consciousness, harder to verbalize.
- Episodic memory most prone to damage ( HM lost ability to learn new episodic memory but not semantic or procedural memory, he could still learn to play the piano but not remember learning it. )
- Procedural memory quite robust (need a lot of damage to have difficulties with procedural memory)
What is the importance of rehearsal
-dramatically increases the likelihood of remembering material.
-early memory theories throught type of rehearsal not important
Ie. Atkinson and Shiffin… amount of time in STM determined likelihood of getting into long term memory (we now know this is not the case)
What are the two types of rehearsal
1 maintenance rehearsal: simple/easy/studying ( list names and repeat to memorize)
- Rote, mechanical process
- recycling items through working memory
2 elaborative rehearsal (relational rehearsal)
- making connections
- meaning of the to be remembered items, relationship with other items.
- More effortful, but promote better recall
- provides more retrieval cues or retrieval paths
Describe the deep vs shallow levels of processing
-who started studying it?
- Craik and Lockhart 1972 focus on the processes involved in memory
1. shallow processing: what’s it rhyme with, look like (blue ink) - structural, phonemic
- maintenance rehearsal
- Deep processing
- what’s the meaning of the word/is it pleasant or not, what’s that have to do with me, does it remind you of something, relate it to self
- semantic, self referential
- elaborative rehearsal, more elaborative and therefore encoded in a stronger way
- generally deep is better than shallow (remember more) -> exception is if the test assesses shallow details (ie. here are the words in different fonts, remember what they were)
Describe incidental learning
Learning in the absence of intention to learn. -Intention seems to influence strategy selection/type of rehearsal
-depth of processing was more important to learning compared to the intention to learn (there was the best recall from the participants who were asked to engage in deep processing(meaningful, elaborative) whether they were told to remember it or not/whether they intended to learn or not)
What are mnemonics and what are the two types
Specific techniques used to aid recall of material (improve memory) that often rely on organization and imagery
- Elaboration coding mnemonics
- add extra stuff in to try and remember (very effortful to do)
- Pegword mnemonic (memorize an organizational structure like a poem -one is a bun to his shoe- has rhymes and is numbered)
- > method of loci:Old method = remembering along a familiar pathway - Reduction coding mnemonics
- reduce amount to remember
e. g. acronyms- ROYGBIV, BEDMAS
What is clustering
Strong tendency to recall items in an organized manner
- clustered into categories with free recall task
- idiosyncratic clusters with material that appears unrelated
- note, clustering(in long-term memory on the way out) is different than chunking(in the short term memory on the way in)
- The list of words goes into the head disorganized but we cluster things in order to remember by similarities. Food, people, whether -organization helps with better recall and sometimes if read slower you can make semantic story to remember better
Describe the importance of understanding in relation to remembering material
- Optimal organization depends on the level of understanding of the material.
- Organization helps aid recall
- people can more easily recall a passage with a title that clarifies the story
- *Understanding is the best organizational strategy or mnemonic device to aid in remembering for long-term memory
Describe the accessibility vs availability of information and long-term memory debate
Do we forget the information(not available) in long-term memory or is it still there(encoded) and we just not retrieve it(unaccessible)
-Will probably never answer which is true
Describe Penfield’s, Nelson’s and Ebbinghau’s evidence against forgetting in long-term memory
Penfield electrically stimulated parts of the brain to trigger patients memories (indicates that the information is there but not always remembered?)
-Nelson made a word pair experiment which found that providing initial portions of a sequence renders greater retrieval access to that sequence than medial components (stem-target)
-Ebbinghau’s relearning task and saving score, working with retention. Discovered forgetting curve. He was his own test subject
(The ones he relearned were easier to learn than new items)
-each time he relearned the list it was easier and faster because there is still something “in there”
- he suggested maybe forgetting is not really forgetting but inability to get info out
Encoding specificity
- Endel Tulving
- at encoding: to be remembered stimulus and other cues as well
- at retrieval: other cues act as retrieval cues (improve access to to be remembered item)
-when you and code TBR information you also may in code multiple other aspects of the environment. These other aspects may act as retrieval cues later on (signifies the importance of context dependent learning)
How do we test memory
- Ability to recall-something from a specific episode
-must be able to access the specific memory trace
-dependent on source memory
Ie. short answer questions - Recognition – identify/recognize something
– must be able to access the memory trace OR be familiar with the item
-role of familiarity and source memory - Remember/know (R/K) judgements
- do you have a deep understanding of concept/to be remembered thing or do you just kinda know that it’s right
What are the implications for context and state dependent memory and elaborative versus rote rehearsal
There are stronger effect for recall than recognition in context and state dependent memory
-elaborative rehearsal prepares you for recall and recognition (more flexible), whereas rote prepares you for recognition more than recall (not as flexible) for retrieval processes
What is implicit and explicit memory and how are they tested
- effortful/deliberate vs automatic
- conscious versus unconscious
- verbal versus non-verbal
- declarative versus procedural
Explicit memory is memory that you are aware of
-tested with direct memory testing.
Implicit memory is memory without awareness
(forgetting the source of information and miss interpreting it as something else)
-we are often not aware of what we know (HM)
-tested with indirect memory testing (don’t address the source memory)
(word stem completion tasks-car-wash, Lexial decision tasks, perceptual identification tasks)
-lots of stores memory give solutions of familiarity
-distinct from explicit memory because it’s not fully conscious
What is the false fame task and what did it show
“How to be famous overnight study”
- Jacoby
- participants presented with a list of non-famous names, after 24 hour delay they tended to recall previously presented names as famous
- Forget the source of the familiarity, falsely attribute it to fame
-showed the implicit memory effect
(if you explicitly remembered the name from last day, you would say that name is not famous, but your implicit memory stays there and drives the false fame effect)
What is the illusion of truth
Given a series of true and false statementsand asked to give credibility ratings. Previously presented statements were more credible the second time it was heard (even when they had been identified as false)
- this is because familiarity creates the illusion of truth
- Practical implications: damage of rumors/propaganda. Still has an affect even when later identified as false
- The more times you hear the lie, the more believable it becomes
- > explicit memory fades fast but implicit memory stays there for a long time
Compare the developmental trends of explicit and implicit memory
-Implicit memory is the first in and last out, it is preserved throughout life (it doesn’t drop/it’s stable)
-explicit memory peaks in early adulthood and slowly declines afterwards. If there’s damage to memory, most likely it’s to explicit memory.
You almost never see damage to implicit memory system.
-Those who say the systems are different look to brand image
What is amnesia
Loss of memory due to injury or illness
Describe the 5 types of Amnesia- 3 main types (R,A,AS,D,O)
- Retrograde amnesia: disruption for things learned prior to the event.
- Anterograde amnesia: disruption for things learned after the event
- Amnesic syndrome: no attentional deficits, intact cognitive functions, preserved memory for language, skills and over-learned personal knowledge- has anterograde and sometimes retrograde amnesia
- Dissociative (Psychogenic) Amnesia: aka fugue state or soap opera Amnesia
-no obvious organic cause; loss of memory as a result of emotional trauma/crisis (psychological reasons, not physical)
-memory may come back after a few days I.e. Lumberjack and Jane Dee/Jody Roberts
-Motivated forgetting? E.g. after a violent crime
(forget because of trauma or because they don’t want to remember, could be used against them)
- Organic amnesia: variety of causes-head injury, stroke, variety of diseases
Describe what memory tends to be preserved and what tends to be disrupted
Preserved:
- working memory – rarely impacted
- semantic memory – but not always!
- procedural/implicit memory- pleasantness ratings, procedural knowledge
Disrupted:
-episodic/autobiographical memory – can be either Anterograde or retrograde deficits (but anterograde more common)
Describe Korsakoff’s syndrome
-Long term alcohol abuse, thiamin deficiency
– damage to the diencephalon (regulates activity in cortex, so area is under active)
-typically unaware of profound memory deficits
– often accompanied by emotional changes i.e. apathy or mild euphoria
-lose emotional response (no real highs or lows)
-don’t care about anything
-blackout periods, don’t engage much in conversation (don’t produce a lot of cues for others to notice their deficits)
What is confabulation
It is a memory error defined as the production of fabricated, distorted, or misinterpreted memories about oneself or the world, without the conscious intention to deceive example: making up an answer on how they got a cut or bruise
Memory is not a true recording of events, it isn’t perfect
What are the seven sins of memory
- Transience: we lose access to info overtime
2.absent mindlessness:inattention, superficial or automatic processing - Blocking: temporary retrieval failure, i.e. tip of the tongue phenomenon
- misattribution: add to getting something to an incorrect source
5 suggestibility: incorporation of info provided by others (end up falsely remembering something that you didn’t see) - Bias: distortion due to previous knowledge, beliefs and feelings (interpret differently I.e. I was a good kid)
- Persistence: failure to forget (even unpleasant events) due to intrusive recollection or rumination
-deeply traumatic events – PTSD