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Memory (1).

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Presentation on theme: "Memory (1)."— Presentation transcript:

1 Memory (1)

2 Atkinson & Shiffrin (1968) Model of Memory

3 Visual Sensory Store X M R J C N K P V F L B
It appears that our visual system is able to hold a great deal of information but that if we do not attend to this information it will be rapidly lost. Sperling (1960) Presented array consisting of three rows of four letters Subjects were cued to report part of display Demo at: X M R J C N K P V F L B

4 Visual Sensory Memory Vary the delay of cue in partial report
After one second, performance reached asymptote Mean number of words reported Delay of cue (in seconds)

5 Iconic Memory Sperling’s experiments indicate the existence of a brief visual sensory memory – known as iconic memory or iconic store Information decays rapidly unless attention is transfers items to short-term memory Analogous auditory store: echoic store

6 Atkinson & Shiffrin (1968) Model of Memory
Short-term memory (STM) is a limited capacity store for information -- place to rehearse new information from sensory buffers Items need to be rehearsed in short-term memory before entering long-term memory (LTM) Probability of encoding in LTM directly related to time in STM

7 a memory test... CONCRETE FOLDER DOORKNOB RAILROAD DOCTOR HAMMER
TURKEY LETTER SUNSHINE KITTEN PLAYER MAPLE CANDLE TABLE SUBWAY PENCIL SOFTBALL TOWEL COFFEE CURTAIN

8 Serial Position Effects
no distractor task distractor task In free recall, more items are recalled from start of list (primacy effect) and end of the list (recency effect) Distractor task (e.g. counting) after last item removes recency effect

9 Serial Position Effects
Explanation from Atkinson and Shiffrin (1968) model: Early items can be rehearsed more often  more likely to be transferred to long-term memory Last items of list are still in short-term memory (with no distractor task)  they can be read out easily from short-term memory

10 Forgetting over time in short-term memory.
Peterson and Peterson (1959)

11 Baddeley’s working memory system.
Baddeley proposed replacing unitary short-term store with working memory model with multiple components: Phonological loop Visuo-spatial sketchpad Central executive (ignore the episodic buffer) Baddeley and Hitch (1974) Baddeley (1986)

12 Phonological Loop (a.k.a. articulatory loop)
Stores a limited number of sounds – number of words is limited by pronunciation time, not number of items Experiment: Word length effect – mean number of words recalled in order (list 1  4.2 words; list 2  2.8 words) Phonological loop stores seconds worth of words LIST 1: Burma Greece Tibet Iceland Malta Laos LIST 2: Switzerland Nicaragua Afghanistan Venezuela Philippines Madagascar

13 Two routes to phonological loop
Articulatory control process Visual presentation Speech code Phonological loop Auditory presentation Articulatory control process converts visually presented words into a speech code Articulatory suppression (e.g. saying “the” all the time) disrupts phonological loop Prediction: Word length effect depends on phonological loop With articulatory suppression, visually presented items should not display word length effect

14 Immediate word recall as a function of modality of presentation (visual vs. auditory), presence vs. absence of articulatory suppression, and word length. Baddeley et al. (1975).

15 Working memory and Language Differences
Different languages have different #syllables per digit Therefore, recall for numbers should be different across languages E.g. memory for English number sequences is better than Spanish or Arabic sequences (Naveh-Benjamin & Ayres, 1986)

16 Evaluation of the Evidence for the Phonological Loop
Accounts for phonological similarity and the word-length effect Support from neuroimaging studies Baddeley, Gathercole, and Papagno (1998) Its function may be to learn new words

17 Encoding & Retrieval Effects

18 Levels of Processing (Craik & Lockhart, 1972)
Levels of processing effect: Deeper levels of processing (e.g., emphasizing meaning) leads to better recall.

19 Encoding Specificity Principle
Recollection performance depends upon the interaction between the properties of the encoded event and the properties of the retrieval information

20 Context Change Information learned in a particular context is better recalled if recall takes place in the same context Similarly, information learned in a particular context may be difficult to recall in a dramatically different context

21 Godden & Baddeley (1975, 1980) Memory experiment with deep-sea divers
Deep-sea divers learned words either on land or underwater They then performed a recall or recognition test on land or underwater

22 Mood-dependent Memory
Easier to remember happy memories in a happy state and sad memories in a sad state. Subjects study positive or negative words in normal state. Test in positive or negative induced states.  mood primes certain memory contents Kenealy (1997).

23 State-dependent recall
Does physical state matter? Eich et al. (1975): study while smoking normal or marijuana cigarette. Test words under same or different physical condition

24 Forgetting

25 Forgetting Functions Ebbinghaus (1885/1913): Forgetting over time as indexed by reduced savings. Most forgetting functions show: Negative acceleration Rate of change gets smaller and smaller with delay Power law of forgetting

26 Forgetting Why do we forget? Some possibilities:
Memory has disappeared  decay theory Memory is still there but we can’t retrieve it  repression  inhibition theory  interference theory

27 What is Repression? “Something happens that is so shocking that the mind grabs hold of the memory and pushes it underground, into some inaccessible corner of the unconscious.” - Loftus (1993) Some self-help book (“Courage to Heal”) relate repressed memories to sexual abuse

28 Recovered memory vs. False Memory
How do we know whether repressed memories are accurate? In some cases, traumatic information is misremembered or simply “made up” Loftus has been involved in many cases Points out problems of hypnosis suggestive questioning dream interpretations Elizabeth Loftus

29 False Memory in the Lab SNORE NAP SLUMBER PEACE DROWSY YAWN BLANKET
Deese, Roediger, McDermott paradigm Study the following words Recall test .... Recognition memory test Use ratings 1) sure new 2) probably new 3) probably old 4) sure old TEST: SNORE NAP SLUMBER PEACE DROWSY YAWN BLANKET DOZE SNOOZE BED AWAKE REST TIRED WAKE DREAM SLEEP COFFEE SNORE REST

30 Results Critical lure (“sleep”) are words not presented but similar to studied words. These words are often falsely recalled (sleep: 61% of Ss.) Recognition memory results proportion of items classified with confidence levels: confidence rating studied items not studied unrelated critical lure (e.g. “REST”) (e.g. “COFFEE”) (e.g. “SLEEP”)

31 Subjects reporting recovered memories are more vulnerable to false memories
False recognition of words not presented in four groups of women with lists containing eight associates. Clancy et al. (2000)

32 Proactive and retroactive interference

33 Inhibitory mechanisms in Forgetting
Cued recall as a function of the number of times the cues had been presented before for recall (respond condition) or for suppression (suppress condition). Anderson and Green (2001)


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