Week 9-Memory Errors Flashcards
What classification types are there for memory errors? (Schacter, 1999; 2021)
■ Transience: Forgetting of memories (iconic memory, echoic memory, forgetting from working memory, forgetting from long-term memory)
■ Absent-mindedness: Memory errors due to attentional failures (i.e., not paying attention) at encoding or retrieval.
■ Blocking: The inability to retrieve information although it has been encoded deeply
– Tip of the tongue feeling
- Intentional suppression of memories
■ Bias: Memory distortion of previous experiences due to influences of present knowledge, beliefs, and feelings.
■ Misattribution: Accurate memories assigned to the wrong source (e.g., remembered the wrong person saying it)
■ Suggestibility: Memories which incorporate inaccurate information from an external source.
■ Persistence: Inability to avoid unwanted, intrusive memories of traumatic or arousing events.
Encoding errors: How do encoding errors occur?
■ Very often, we fail to remember because the memory was never encoded properly e.g., forgetting where the car keys are.
■ We tend to encode more efficiently when we focus our attention and process information at a semantic level, or when the encoding operations are the best suited to the future retrieval demands.
■ So, most of the failures will be either due to slips of attention or inefficient information processing.
■ As an example, we can look at how the use of technology can cause memory problems.
Encoding errors: What is a GPS?
■ Global Positioning System (GPS) is a satellite-based system that provides spatial navigation guidance in real time and tends to be pretty accurate.
■ Includes both visual and voice instructions. It has replaced the need of maps or verbal instructions.
■ Can be part of multiple devices (phones, smart watches, computers)
Encoding errors: What is the link between the use of GPS and spatial memory? (Gardony et al., 2015)
■ Participants were asked to navigate different virtual environments in four different conditions: With and without GPS, both with attention divided and undivided.
■ They first saw an overhead view of the environment and then navigated across 10 landmarks (city hall, hotel, library, garden, etc.).
■ Receiving GPS-type instructions made it much easier for participants to navigate through the unknown environment,
in particular in the undivided condition i.e., full attention
■ After completing the navigation task, spatial memory was tested in a variety of ways including:
– Landmark recall
– Map organisation (draw the map themselves to see how they organised the space in their mind)
– Pointing (pointing directions for specific landmarks)
■ The aid (GPS-like instructions) affected memory only in the undivided (full) attention condition i.e., made it worse. It did not have any impact in the divided attention condition.
■ The presence of navigational Aids such as GPS affect the creation of new spatial memories by reducing people’s attention to spatial information.
Incidental forgetting: Define Decay
Mnemonic traces simply fade away with time i.e., neural connections fade (hard to test this as a cause of forgetting as we cannot exclude any other factors)
Incidental forgetting: What are some causes of forgetting?
■ Interference
– Proactive: previous learned information interferes with new memories
– Retroactive: newly learned information interferes with old memories
■ Retrieval failure: memories present but inaccessible
■ Context dependency: changes in environment between encoding and retrieval affect recall of information
■ Directed forgetting: conscious, deliberate forgetting
Incidental forgetting: What is the rate of forgetting?
■ Rate of forgetting is non-linear with maximum loss shortly after learning and little additional loss of information at longer delays.
■ Forgetting curves for different types of information and different degrees of learning are comparable.
■ Forgetting has been linked to interference between current and past information.
■ Proactive and retroactive interference effects
Motivated forgetting: What is Freud’s theory behind suppression of memories?
■ One of the basic elements of Freudian theory is the notion of “repression” or “suppression”.
■ Undesirable or painful feelings, images and thoughts are pushed out of memory to stop them interfering with our everyday lives.
■ According to Freud this banishment of unwanted memories can be either a conscious or an unconscious process.
– Sometimes repression is used for unconscious and suppression for conscious forgetting
Motivated forgetting: What is the item method seen in directed forgetting? (Anderson & Hanslmayr, 2014)
■ In the item-method, after each item is presented at encoding, participants are asked to either remember or forget the preceding item
■ At tests they are asked to retrieve all items and participants
retrieve more remember than forget items
■ The effect is found for both pictures and words and in both
recall and recognition tests suggesting deficits at encoding
than difficulties at retrieval
– Perhaps, the memory was not created at the first place
-Recall is a harder test whereas recognition is an easier test as you are limited with the information to recognise it.
Motivated forgetting: What is behind the item-method forgetting?
■ The Selective Rehearsal hypothesis suggests that people restrict elaborative processing of
the Forget items
– There is more cognitive effort in Remember than Forget trials
■ The Encoding Suppression hypothesis suggests that forgetting is an active process
– There is more cognitive effort in Forget than Remember trials (you engage a different mechanism and try your hardest to forget what you’ve seen before).
■ There is evidence that reaction times to a secondary task is slower after Forget than Remember items (Fawcett & Taylor, 2008)
– One possibility is that there are fewer resources available in Forget trials because Forget trials involve additional processing
Motivated forgetting: what is the list method in directed forgetting?
■ Another way to induce forgetting is to interfere with retrieval processes
■ In the list-method, two lists are presented. At the end of one list
and without expecting it (i.e., researcher “realising” they gave the wrong list), participants are asked to forget the previous items.
■ At test, they are asked to retrieve all items and participants retrieve more from the remember than the forget list.
■ The effect is found only in recall (recognition memory is not
impaired) suggesting the deficit affects locating the memory (i.e.
retrieval). This is because in theory, they have pushed out the previous information so they can remember the newer ones better.
Motivated forgetting: Intentional Retrieval Suppression: What is the Think-No Think paradigm? (Anderson et al., 2004)
Phase 1-Training
■ Ss learn a series of unrelated word-pairs
…pen-cherry, table-crane, glass-fur…
Phase 2-Experimental session (multiple presentation of cues)
■ Some pairs (pen-cherry) are tagged as respond (Think):
“when you see the cue pen think of its pair”
■ Some pairs (table-crane) are tagged as suppress (No Think):
“when you see the cue table do not think of its pair”
■ Some pairs (glass-fur) are not repeated (Baseline)
Phase 3-Test
■ All pairs are tested and participants are asked to try hard to remember
“….try to remember the word that was paired with pen”
Motivated forgetting: Intentional Retrieval Suppression: What are the findings of the Think-No Think paradigm? (Anderson et al., 2004)
Recall for No Think pairs worse than the baseline (but no difference for Think pairs).
Forgetting increases (recall drops) with greater successive suppression attempts.
Forgetting under strategic, executive control i.e., we have control over our forgetting
Active inhibition of retrieval in our brains.
■ The Bilateral anterior hippocampi showed reduced activity during suppression (Forget!) trials.
■ These areas showed increased
activity during suppression (Forget!) trials:
– Ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (VLPFC)
– Dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC)
– Anterior cingulate cortex (ACC)
– Intraparietal sulcus (IPS)
■ Increased activation in DLPFC & left VLPFC predicted increased memory inhibition in the behavioural task.
■ Other non-memory but similar tasks that also require subjects to override strong responses also activate the DLPFC, the VLPFC and the ACC.
■ The hippocampal reductions are in agreement with the well known role of the hippocampus in memory processes and in memory encoding in particular.
■ Suppressed activity of the
hippocampus may explain the fact that these items were subsequently less likely to be
remembered.
■ In addition, the study provided some evidence of executive control over the hippocampus.
Increases in DLPFC correlated with increased suppression for SF items in the right hippocampus.
Give an overall summary of motivated forgetting
■ There is strong evidence that we can explicitly and to a certain extent control what information we will remember or forget.
■ This can be accomplished not just by controlling encoding (i.e. pay more attention) to the
information we wish to remember but by actively suppressing unwanted memories.
■ Studies using the think/no think paradigm have also revealed a network of brain structures
which interact to suppress memories.
■ Not all studies have replicated the results of the think/no think paradigm; the neural correlates of conscious and unconscious suppression mechanisms are still under investigation.
Bias: What is emotional bias?
■ When asked to note (autobiographical) memories that come to their mind effortlessly, people show a tendency to retrieve more pleasant than unpleasant memories.
■ In one study, 49% were pleasant and only 19% unpleasant (Bernsten, 1996).
■ We also tend to remember the positive more than the negative feedback that we receive
(Sedikides & Green, 2000).
■ This does not extend to all negative information.
– We don’t tend to forget negative information about us but we remember negative feedback directed more towards others especially those we do not
personally know!
Bias: What is the Inconsistency-Negativity Neglect Model? (Sedikides & Green, 2000)
■ Individuals are “motivated to neglect the processing of information that challenges their positive self-conceptions […] The more challenging the information is, the more likely the individual will be to neglect it.” (p. 909)
■ Feedback inconsistent with self image and which targets central self-conceptions is seen as particularly threatening because it affects the stability of the self-concept.
■ Ignoring negative feedback ensures stability of self-concept.