Wk 13 - LTM 2 Flashcards
What is meant by encoding? (X2)
The processing operations (type of study) that cause item to be stored in LTM
What is meant by retrieval? (X2)
Using provided/self-generated cues to retrieve items from memory
Processes may be different for recall/recog
What is meant by encoding/retrieval interactions? (X3)
The good memory not just down to good encoding and retrieval cues - need to consider
How the material is to be used, and
How memory is to be assessed at test
What is the argument for depth of processing in memory encoding? (X1)
And three pieces of evidence for?
Argument is for continuum of depth: orthography, phonology, semantic
Craik found better recall after semantic than rehearsal
Small size difference between animals = better memory for words - deeper semantic analysis for small diffs
Recall better for words used in elaborate way, eg the great bird swooped down and carried off the struggling (chicken)
Describe evidence on the influence of emotion on memory encoding (x3)
Rubin/Kozin found strongest childhood memories for emotionally charged events - but probably through repeated discussions
Cahill/McGaugh found better memories for ‘real’ surgical pictures than fake
High confidence proclaimed for flashbulb memories of significant events
What does evidence suggest about retrieval processes and cues?
Good cues - contextual info encoded (provided or self-generated) at study, or given at test = better recall
What is the Transfer Appropriate Processing framework? (X11)
And two pieces of evidence for?
It is idea that transfer to LTM is best when study and test processes overlap
Morris, Bransford, Frank: superiority of semantic memory is due to the semantic nature of most memory tests
Encoding specificity - Tulving, Thompson: retrieval is best if conditions, info, encoding match those at retrieval
What are one indirect and three direct benefits of repeated tests of learning?
Study more when know a test is coming
Highlights gaps in knowledge
Additional encoding of retrieved material
Improved ease of retrieval
How does the Transfer Appropriate Processing framework differ from memory systems concept? (X2)
Plus one piece of evidence
Need to rethink of episodic/semantic memory systems as distinct,
And by extension that tests were accessing one or the other
Encoding in Blaxton: conceptual condition generated related word, perceptual read the word with a control, found that match CS mismatch at study/test would predict memory
What approaches can you take to uni learning, apart from repeated testing?(x3)
Distributed practice
Elaborative interrogation - why is this true?
Self-explanation/ordering of info
What evidence discounts the Levels of Processing idea of memory encoding? (X2)
The Stroop effect - asked to process orthography, not meaning
So effect wouldn’t happen if we could truly only process at that level
Craig found that intent to learn has what impact on memory encoding?
(X3)
None
Results are the same as for semantic - higher than orthography then phonology
But this likely indicates use of semantic strategies
Hue and Jenkins, 1973, found what impact for intent to learn on memory encoding? (X3)
None
Ratings of pleasantness of task, or letter checking task, under impression of memory task to come, or not
No diff in incidental/intentional, but higher for semantic task
How does semantic processing work, according to the LOP model of memory encoding? (X2)
It’s the impact on retrieval -
More pathways, cues, connections
Deep/semantic/elaborate processing is associated with what processes of student learning? (X3)
Organisation - own order enhances memory, eg method of loci, mnemonics
Chunking - promoted through meaning/structure of items
Understanding - learn story better if preceded by an interpretation