Topic 2b - Memory Flashcards
1
Q
Main Idea
A
Our memory is our brain’s attempt to recreate what happened based on available information, rather than stored information that is accessed
2
Q
Missing Doctor List
A
- Someone reads a list of words related to medicine, people remember the word “doctor” being on the list even though it wasn’t
- When you remember something, you are trying to figure out what happened, and your guess can be wrong
3
Q
Constructive in Nature
A
- Remembering is constructive, so you can remember events than never occurred quite clearly
- Our experience is the product of our guesses of what’s there, and memory is no exception
4
Q
Eyeglasses vs Barbells
A
- People are shown an abstract shape, then asked to redraw the item they saw. The experimenter says what the item was (for instance, a pair of glasses) which leads people to add details to the drawing that weren’t in the original shape
- Remembering is the process of generating what you think happened in the past
5
Q
Car Crash Memory Study
A
- People are asked how fast a car was going in a video of a car crash. People give different estimates based on the word choice of the question (“smashed” vs “bumped”)
- Even though they saw the video before being given the word, the word affects their memory
6
Q
Broken Glass from Crash
A
- Same as above, but people are asked if they saw broken glass
- People sometimes add details (broken glass) based on what they think happened (if they think the car “smashed” the other one)
7
Q
Repetition Breeds Familiarity
A
- If you repeatedly misremember something, you are essentially practicing misremembering it, so you recall it better
- Memory can be skewed by repeatedly emphasizing something
8
Q
Memory and Perception
A
- Subjects are rapidly presented 7 words and then a test word, which may or may not have been one of the earlier words and might be blurry
- Word was more often mistakenly believed to be in the list if it wasn’t blurry, because it seems more familiar when you can see it clearly
- Your perceptions can influence your memories
9
Q
Perception and Memory
A
- Subjects are shown faces at varying levels of blurriness
- Faces they’ve seen before are reported to be less blurry than unfamiliar ones
- Your memories can influence your perceptions
10
Q
Source Forgetting
A
- People shown a series of statements for one exercise, then another series for a second exercise which may include statements from the first one
- People tend to rate previously seen statements as being more reliable, even though they knew during the first exercise it might have been false
- Seeing something multiple times makes it seem more credible
11
Q
Source Forgetting even when you knew if it was true
A
- Same as previous, but people were straight-up told whether or not the statement was true at the time
- People still made the same assumptions
- The effect of source forgetting is very powerful
12
Q
Repetition in Propaganda
A
- Politicians have talking points so that people hear them over time and then find them more credible
- People understand and exploit how our cognitive systems work
13
Q
Medical Technology - the list
A
- Conditions drastically improved in hospitals where doctors used a checklist for hygiene issues rather than trying to remember them
- Even the smartest of the smartest fall prey to faulty memory