ATKINSON & SHIFFRIN MODEL OF MEMORY. Consists of three stores or functional storage location. Sensory store Short-term store Long-term store

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1 MEMORY

2 ATKINSON & SHIFFRIN MODEL OF MEMORY Consists of three stores or functional storage location Sensory store Short-term store Long-term store

3 ENCODING, STORAGE AND RETRIEVAL The three stores each use three processes: 1. Encoding, or the process of storage, 2. Moving of the encoded memory into a memory store and maintaining that information 3. Retrieval, which is the subsequent access of the stored memory information in order to bring it back into consciousness

4 STUDYING MEMORY: INFORMATION PROCESSING MODELS Keyboard (Encoding) Disk (Storage) Sequential Process Monitor (Retrieval) 103

5 INFORMATION PROCESSING The Atkinson-Schiffrin (1968) three-stage model of memory includes a) sensory memory, b) short-term memory, and c) long-term memory. Bob Daemmrich/ The Image Works Bob Daemmrich/ The Image Works Frank Wartenberg/ Picture Press/ Corbis 104

6 MULTIPLE-STORE MODEL OF MEMORY Atkinson & Schiffrin

7 SENSORY MEMORY The iconic store is a visual memory that lasts for only a fraction of a second Sperling s research demonstrated that subjects could recall visual material (icons), but only within a very short (less than a second) time interval. George Sperling

8 WHOLE REPORT Sperling (1960) R G T F M Q L Z S Recall R T M Z (44% recall) 50 ms (1/20 second) The exposure time for the stimulus is so small that items cannot be rehearsed. 107

9 PARTIAL REPORT S X T J R S P K Y 50 ms (1/20 second) Low Tone Medium Tone High Tone Recall J R S (100% recall) Sperling (1960) argued that sensory memory capacity was larger than what was originally thought. 108

10 TIME DELAY A D I N L V O G H Time Delay Low Tone Medium Tone High Tone Recall N (33% recall) 50 ms (1/20 second) 109

11 SENSORY MEMORY The longer the delay, the greater the memory loss. Percent Recognized Time (Seconds) 110

12 SENSORY MEMORIES The duration of sensory memory varies for the different senses. Iconic 0.5 sec. long Echoic 3-4 sec. long Hepatic < 1 sec. long 111

13 ICONIC MEMORY AND MOTION PICTURES Why do we see movement, when in reality, what we are seeing is a rapidly presented series of still pictures?

14 SENSORY STORAGE An echoic store also exists for the storage of perceived sounds, as well as possible sensory stores for the other sensory modalities (such as olfaction and taste but these latter two are controversial)

15 SHORT-TERM MEMORY A storage space of limited capacity and duration At most, information can be held in the short term store for up to a couple of minutes Typically held for only a few seconds

16 CAPACITY The Magical Number Seven, Plus or Minus Two: Some Limits on Our Capacity for Processing Information (1956). Ready? M U T G I K T L R S Y P You should be able to recall 7±2 letters. George Miller 115

17 CHUNKING The capacity of the working memory may be increased by chunking. F-B-I-T-W-A-C-I-A-I-B-M FBI TWA CIA IBM 4 chunks 116

18 ENCODING: GETTING INFORMATION IN How We Encode 1. Some information (route to your school) is automatically processed. 2. However, new or unusual information (friend s new cell-phone number) requires attention and effort. 117

19 AUTOMATIC PROCESSING We process an enormous amount of information effortlessly, such as the following: 1. Space: While reading a textbook, you automatically encode the place of a picture on a page. 2. Time: We unintentionally note the events that take place in a day. 3. Frequency: You effortlessly keep track of things that happen to you. 118

20 EFFORTFUL PROCESSING Committing novel information to memory requires effort just like learning a concept from a textbook. Such processing leads to durable and accessible memories. Spencer Grant/ Photo Edit Bananastock/ Alamy 119

21 ENCODING Studying how information is encoded in the shortterm store, Conrad found that strings of letters (e.g., B, C, F, M, etc.) presented visually were most subject to acoustic confusability (F vs. S). Baddeley produce similar findings in an experiment that varied the acoustic and semantic similarities of similar words. Suggests short-term memory encoded acoustically, not semantically.

22 REHEARSAL Once information is in the short-term store, how is it kept there? Rehearsal (in this case, maintenance rehearsal of repeating the information over and over) is the key to keeping items in short-term memory. Strategies like rehearsal are examples of metamemory skills, or skills based on an understanding of how one s own mind works.

23 REHEARSAL Effortful learning usually requires rehearsal or conscious repetition. Ebbinghaus studied rehearsal by using nonsense syllables: TUV YOF GEK XOZ Hermann Ebbinghaus ( ) 122

24 REHEARSAL The more times the nonsense syllables were practiced on Day 1, the fewer repetitions were required to remember them on Day

25 REHEARSAL Mnemonic devices are also examples of metamemory skills. Young children, typically, have not yet learned metamemory or other metacognitive skills.

26 INTERFERENCE AND DECAY When information is lost from short-term memory, forgetting occurs. The two best studied theories on forgetting are interference and decay theory.

27 INTERFERENCE Discovered simultaneously by researchers Brown and Peterson when they found that sometimes subject s forgetting was due to the fact that the target information was displaced in memory by competing information. The two types of interference that have been identified: Retroactive interference Proactive interference

28 RETROACTIVE INTERFERENCE Occurs when newer information in memory inhibits the retrieval of older information in memory. (Ex.: one has trouble remembering one s previous phone number because it is blocked by the newly memorized new phone number)

29 PROACTIVE INTERFERENCE Occurs when older information in memory inhibits the retrieval of newer information in memory. (Ex.: continually calling a new roommate by the name of a previous roommate)

30 DECAY THEORY Memories disappear gradually with disuse. Difficult to test for because experimenters can never be sure that items have not recently been rehearsed.

31 CAPACITY OF SHORT-TERM MEMORY Miller demonstrated that short-term memory had capacity of around seven items, plus or minus two items. Items can be chunked together so seven words can be remembered or seven letters if they did not make up a word.

32 CHUNKING

33

34

35 CHUNKING Organizing items into a familiar, manageable unit. Try to remember the numbers below If you are well versed with American history, chunk the numbers together and see if you can recall them better

36 CHUNKING Acronyms are another way of chunking information to remember it. HOMES = Huron, Ontario, Michigan, Erie, Superior ROY G. BIV = Red, Orange, Yellow, Green, Blue, Indigo, Violet 135

37 CAPACITY OF SHORT-TERM MEMORY The serial position curve shows how the order of presentation affects short-term memory. Items near the middle of any set of items are the hardest to remember. Items to the front of the set are more easily remembered, a phenomenon known as the primacy effect. The primacy effect probably occurs because the first words have been moved into long-term memory by the time they are recalled.

38 CAPACITY OF SHORT-TERM MEMORY Items near the end of the set also were easily remembered, a phenomenon known as the recency effect. Recency probably occurs because these words are still held in short-term memory at the time of recall.

39 SHORT-TERM MEMORY RETRIEVAL Saul Sternberg s research in memory scanning subjects given a string of one to six digits to hold short-term memory. After a short pause, a test digit flashed before them on the screen. Possible explanations for retrieval: Parallel processing Serial processing Exhaustive Self terminating

40 PARALLEL PROCESSING Perhaps the subjects were able to simultaneously retrieve all the digits from shortterm memory and compare them to the test digit. If so, the size of the original string of digits should not impact response time.

41 SERIAL PROCESSING Perhaps the subjects sequentially retrieved the digits from short-term memory and compared them to the test digit. If so, then the size of the original digit string would influence the response time.

42 LONG-TERM MEMORY Essentially unlimited capacity store. R.J. Erwin/ Photo Researchers The Clark s nutcracker can locate 6,000 caches of buried pine seeds during winter and spring. 141

43 MEMORY FEATS 142

44 LONG-TERM MEMORY Long-term memories are what people usually are referring to speak of memory. May last indefinitely, but how are they moved into long-term memory? Rehearsal Paying deliberate attention to information Connecting new information to old Integrating new information into memory

45 FORMS OF ENCODING IN LONG-TERM MEMORY Unlike short-term memory, long-term memory is mostly encoded semantically, or via meaning. But visual and acoustic encoding are also present Blousfield found that subjects are more likely to retrieve words by category than at random Frost demonstrated that subjects may simultaneously use both semantic and visual information when encoding.

46 FORMS OF ENCODING IN LONG-TERM MEMORY Nelson and Rothbart suggest that the acoustic codes can operate in long-term memory as well as in short-term memory Anderson and Bower and others have produced data that support the propositional view (storage according to their deep meaning) for storage of both verbal and visual information. MacLeod, Hunt, and Matthews found data that suggest the subjects use either propositional or imaginal storage.

47 STORING MEMORIES IN THE BRAIN 1. Loftus and Loftus (1980) reviewed previous research data showing, through brain stimulation, that memories were etched into the brain and found that only a handful of brain stimulated patients reported flashbacks. 2. Using rats, Lashley (1950) suggested that even after removing parts of the brain, the animals retain partial memory of the maze. 146

48 SYNAPTIC CHANGES In Aplysia, Kandel and Schwartz (1982) showed that serotonin release from neurons increased after conditioning. Photo: Scientific American 147

49 SYNAPTIC CHANGES Long-Term Potentiation (LTP) refers to synaptic enhancement after learning (Lynch, 2002). An increase in neurotransmitter release or receptors on the receiving neuron indicates strengthening of synapses. Both Photos: From N. Toni et al., Nature, 402, Nov Courtesy of Dominique Muller 148

50 BADDELEY S MODEL: WORKING MEMORY Working memory is seen as a special, activated part of long-term memory that moves information into and out of shortterm memory. Working memory consists of three parts: Visuospatial sketchpad briefly holds visual information Phonological loop briefly holds auditory information Central executive coordinates attentional activities and governance responses.

51 BADDELEY S MODEL: WORKING MEMORY Recently, another component has been added to the model, the episodic buffer. The job of this limited-capacity component is to take information from the different parts of working memory so that they make sense

52 BADDELEY S MODEL: WORKING MEMORY Some physiological data support the working memory view of memory. PET data have yielded preliminary mappings of the brain areas that are related to the visiospatial sketchpad, phonological loop, and central executive. Further research is necessary to confirm validity of the working memory theory.

53 BADDELEY S MODEL: WORKING MEMORY Some physiological data support the working memory view of memory. PET data have yielded preliminary mappings of the brain areas that are related to the visiospatial sketchpad, phonological loop, and central executive. Further research is necessary to confirm validity of the working memory theory.

54 STORING IMPLICIT & EXPLICIT MEMORIES Explicit Memory refers to facts and experiences that one can consciously know and declare. Implicit memory involves learning an action while the individual does not know or declare what she knows. 153

55 Hippocampus Hippocampus a neural center in the limbic system that processes explicit memories. Weidenfield & Nicolson archives 154

56 REPRESENTING IMAGES Kosslyn has conducted a series of experiments that support the imaginal view. He found evidence that suggests that subjects are able to store detailed, accurate images in their minds. Often, these mental maps behave in a similar way to real, visual, representations. Other data suggests that we do not store accurate images.

57 DUAL-TRACE THEORY The current dialectic attempts to reconcile these findings in dual trace theory. Dual trace theory proposes that both propositional and dimensional representations are used.

58 STORAGE AND FORGETTING What represents the optimal manner in which to base your studying the material during learning? According to the total-time hypothesis, if only one session is available for study, then it does not matter how one apportions his or her study time within the session. However if more than one study session is available then the manner in which one schedules his or her time does seem to matter.

59 STORAGE AND FORGETTING Bahrick and Phelps found that subjects who studied using massed learning (cramming in one session) had inferior recall of material relative to subjects who studied under distributed learning (learning that was spread across several sessions, but equal in total time to that experienced by the massed learning subjects). Students unfortunately often use massed practice when distributed practice would serve them much better.

60 STORAGE AND FORGETTING Rehearsal has been shown to have clear effects in the encoding the memories. According to the total-time hypothesis, rehearsal s effects are mainly due to the amount of time spent in it.

61 ELABORATION However, elaboration (forging associative links among items and between the items and information already stored in long-term memory) during rehearsal does make for better retrieval. One powerful way of accomplishing elaboration is to organize the material being encoded.

62 ORGANIZATION OF INFORMATION: SEMANTIC AND EPISODIC MEMORY Semantic memory, or our general world knowledge, is common to nearly everyone, and not time-stamped in memory. Semantic memory operates on both concepts (ideas) and schemas (cognitive networks of ideas).

63 ORGANIZATION OF INFORMATION: SEMANTIC AND EPISODIC MEMORY In contrast to semantic memory, episodic memory consists of the personal, autobiographical aspects of everyone s memory. Episodic memories are time-tagged in that we can recall the approximate location and time of the events in our lives. The degree to which semantic and episodic memories result from different memorial systems or processes is not entirely clear at this time.

64 INTERFERENCE Both retroactive interference and proactive interference affect long-term memory: Sometimes, older information can inhibit the acquisition of newer information. In this case proactive interference results in negative transfer. Sometimes newer information can inhibit the acquisition of older information, retroactive interference resulting in negative transfer.

65 INTERFERENCE Learning some new information may disrupt retrieval of other information. 164

66 RETROACTIVE INTERFERENCE Sleep prevents retroactive interference. Therefore, it leads to better recall. 165

67 POSITIVE TRANSFER In positive transfer, older knowledge facilitates the acquisition of newer knowledge. For example, if one knows how to play the piano, learning to play the organ should be easier for having that knowledge.

68 CAPACITY Although some researchers like Hintzman have suggested that long-term store is essentially infinite, the impossibility of designing experiments to probe the limits of the long-term store will probably prevent us from ever knowing its capacity. It is equally difficult to design experiments to test the duration of memories in the long-term store. We cannot be certain that memories are permanent, but they have been shown to be enduring, lasting decades.

69 RETRIEVAL: GETTING INFORMATION OUT Retrieval refers to getting information out of the memory store. Spanky s Yearbook Archive Spanky s Yearbook Archive 168

70 MEASURES OF MEMORY In recognition, the person must identify an item amongst other choices. (A multiple-choice test requires recognition.) 1. Name the capital of France. a. Brussels b. Rome c. London d. Paris 169

71 MEASURES OF MEMORY In recall, the person must retrieve information using effort. (A fill-in-the blank test requires recall.) 1. The capital of France is. 170

72 RETRIEVAL Availability and accessibility of memory are two relevant concepts in retrieval. Availability relates to the presence of a memory in the long-term store. Accessibility refers to our ability to retrieve an available memory trace.

73 RETRIEVAL The current controversy in psychology centers on the issue of inaccessible memories and the proposed phenomenon of repression. Some psychologists claim that victims of childhood sexual abuse repress their memories of the abuse. These memories may be released from repression into consciousness (often through the aid of a therapist). The validity of such derepressed memories, however, is doubtful.

74 RETRIEVAL The study of retrieval from LTM dates back to the work of Hermann Ebbinghaus in the late 19 th century. Ebbinghaus used nonsense syllables to test his subjects retrieval because he wanted to eliminate elaboration as a confound in the study.

75 RETRIEVAL This practice of using nonsense syllables of stimuli has been criticized on the grounds that the use of nonsense syllables does not rule out elaboration and that we should be looking at memory for everyday things. In other words, memory for nonsense syllables may not resemble memory for more meaningful stimuli.

76 MEASURES OF MEMORY In relearning, the individual shows how much time (or effort) is saved when learning material for the second time. List Jet Dagger Tree Kite Silk Frog Ring 1 day later List Jet Dagger Tree Kite Silk Frog Ring Saving Original Trials Relearning Trials X 100 Relearning Trials X 100 It took 10 trials to learn this list It took 5 trials to learn the list 50% 175

77 RETRIEVAL CUES Memories are held in storage by a web of associations. These associations are like anchors that help retrieve memory. smell fire Fire Truck hose water smoke heat truck red 176

78 PRIMING To retrieve a specific memory from the web of associations, you must first activate one of the strands that leads to it. This process is called priming. 177

79 DÉJÀ VU Déjà Vu means I've experienced this before. Cues from the current situation may unconsciously trigger retrieval of an earlier similar experience. The New Yorker Collection, Leo Cullum from cartoonbank.com. All Rights Reserved 178

80 CONTEXT EFFECTS After learning to move a mobile by kicking, infants most strongly respond when retested in the same context rather than in a different context (Rovee-Collier, 1993). Courtesy of Carolyn Rovee-Collier, Rutgers University 179

81 CUE EFFECTIVENESS AND ENCODING SPECIFICITY Timo Mantyla found that subjects who made up their own retrieval cues were able to learn and retrieve long lists of words ( ) with very few errors. The subjects self-generated cues were most effective when they were distinctive and compatible with the target word.

82 CUE EFFECTIVENESS AND ENCODING SPECIFICITY Contextual cues that are present at the time of encoding may also later serve as retrieval cues. Therefore, encoding and retrieval are thought to be dependent on each other, a phenomenon Tulving and Thompson termed encoding specificity.

83 CUE EFFECTIVENESS AND ENCODING SPECIFICITY Several experiments have supported the notion of encoding and specificity. One famous experiment conducted by Godden and Baddeley showed that divers who learned lists of words either underwater or onshore are best able to recall these words when there was a match in their encoding and retrieval context (i.e., underwater or onshore). Moods and states of consciousness also have been shown to provide contextual retrieval cues

84 CONTEXT EFFECTS Scuba divers recall more words underwater if they learned the list underwater, while they recall more words on land if they learned that list on land (Godden & Baddeley, 1975). Fred McConnaughey/ Photo Researchers 183

85 MOODS AND MEMORIES We usually recall experiences that are consistent with our current mood (state-dependent memory). Emotions, or moods, serve as retrieval cues. Our memories are mood-congruent. Jorgen Schytte/ Still Pictures 184

86 CONSTRUCTIVE NATURE OF MEMORY Memory is not only reconstructive, or the storage of information about events as they actually happened, it is also constructive, meaning that prior experiences help subjects construct their memories, and previously stored knowledge can affect the storage of new memories. Subjects appear to be unable to distinguish between the two types.

87 WAR OF THE GHOSTS EXPERIMENT In the early part of the 20 th century, Sir Frederick Bartlett demonstrated the constructive nature of memory in his famous War of the Ghosts experiment. Bartlett had British subjects read The War of the Ghosts, a Native American legend. Because the subjects were unfamiliar with many of the cultural aspects of the story, they found it difficult to read and comprehend.

88 WAR OF THE GHOSTS EXPERIMENT Later, when the subjects were asked to recall the story, they distorted their memories of the story s events to bring them more in line with their own cultural expectations. More modern cross-cultural studies give further support of Bartlett s view that memory is schematic and constructive.

89 AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL MEMORY The memory of our own history is called autobiographical memory. This memory is constructive and can often be quite good, but distorted, not representing what actually happened in all their details. Rubin found that such memory is differentially good at different periods of life: middle-aged adults remember events from their childhood and the early adult years better than their more recent past.

90 AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL MEMORY Typically, these memories are studied through the use of diary studies where the researcher keeps detailed autobiographies for a period of time. Using this technique, Linton, recorded events on index cards over six years. Surprisingly, her rate of forgetting was linear, not the expected curvilinear, meaning the rate of forgetting was about the same over the entire period

91 AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL MEMORY Another study by Shulster which covered a 25 year period, however, showed the more traditional serial-position effect.

92 RETRIEVAL FAILURE Although the information is retained in the memory store, it cannot be accessed. Tip-of-the-tongue (TOT) is a retrieval failure phenomenon. Given a cue (What makes blood cells red?) the subject says the word begins with an H (hemoglobin). 191

93 MOTIVATED FORGETTING Motivated Forgetting: People unknowingly revise their memories. Repression: A defense mechanism that banishes anxiety-arousing thoughts, feelings, and memories from consciousness. Sigmund Freud Culver Pictures 192

94 WHY DO WE FORGET? Forgetting can occur at any memory stage. We filter, alter, or lose much information during these stages. 193

95 MEMORY DISTORTIONS According to Schacter, there are seven reasons, or sins, for why memories are distorted. 1. Transience. Memory fades quickly. 2. Absent-mindedness. People sometimes repeat tasks they have just completed, or forget what they were looking for in the middle of searching. 3. Blocking. People know they have something to remember, but they can t. An example of tip-ofthe tongue phenomenon.

96 MEMORY DISTORTIONS 4. Misattribution. Not remembering where one read or heard something. 5. Suggestibility. Being susceptible to suggestion, so the memory may not be of something they actually experienced. 6. Bias. Personal biases often alter recall. 7. Persistence. Inconsequential facts are remembered as consequential facts.

97

98 Slumber Tired Bed Night Rest Awaken Snore Dream Quiet Peace Relaxed Drowsy

99 ON THE LIST? Slumber Bed Sleep Drowsy Peace

100 Slumber Tired Bed Night Rest Awaken Snore Dream Quiet Peace Relaxed Drowsy

101 MEMORY CONSTRUCTION While tapping our memories, we filter or fill in missing pieces of information to make our recall more coherent. Misinformation Effect: Incorporating misleading information into one's memory of an event. 200

102 EYEWITNESS ACCOUNTS Elizabeth Loftus has repeatedly demonstrated in the lab that eyewitness testimony is often less than accurate. This poses a serious concern for our society because eyewitness testimony has been estimated to be the most important factor in many convictions.

103 MISINFORMATION AND IMAGINATION EFFECTS Eyewitnesses reconstruct their memories when questioned about the event. Depiction of the actual accident. 202

104 MISINFORMATION Group A: How fast were the cars going when they hit each other? Group B: How fast were the cars going when they smashed into each other? 203

105 MEMORY CONSTRUCTION A week later they were asked: Was there any broken glass? Group B (smashed into) reported more broken glass than Group A (hit). 50 Broken Glass? (%) Group A (hit) Group B (Smashed into) Verb 204

106 EYEWITNESS ACCOUNTS In a typical procedure, Loftus showed slides to all of her subjects. The slideshow of a car accident in which a red car turned at a stop sign and runs into a pedestrian. Then half of her subjects were asked, Did a car pass the red car while it was stopped at the stop sign? The other half were asked, did another car pass the red car while it was stopped at a yield sign?

107 EYEWITNESS ACCOUNTS They were then asked to identify the original scene. Accuracy in correctly identifying the original scene was 34% higher in the group that was asked the question with the word stop sign in it. Apparently, the presentation of inconsistent information to the witness has the power to make eyewitness memory less accurate.

108 SOURCE-MONITORING CONFUSIONS One reason for poor eyewitness memory may be the source monitoring confusions or the ability to remember having been exposed to a stimulus, but not being able to accurately recall where such exposure occurred. Source-monitoring confusions can lead witnesses to falsely believe that they saw or heard things that in reality were only experienced in the witness s own mind.

109 CONSTRUCTED MEMORIES Loftus research shows that if false memories (lost at the mall or drowned in a lake) are implanted in individuals, they construct (fabricate) their memories. Don Shrubshell 208

110 CHILDREN S MEMORIES Research with children has shown that children are even more susceptible to such influences than adults are, especially when leading questions are asked. Preschool children often tell adults what the adults want to hear, include information from others when recalling the events (reality monitoring confusion), and in general make mistakes when recalling events.

111 CONSENSUS ON CHILDHOOD ABUSE Leading psychological associations of the world agree on the following concerning childhood sexual abuse: 1. Injustice happens. 2. Incest and other sexual abuse happen. 3. People may forget. 4. Recovered memories are commonplace. 5. Recovered memories under hypnosis or drugs are unreliable. 6. Memories of things happening before 3 years of age are unreliable. 7. Memories, whether real or false, are emotionally upsetting. 210

112 STRESS HORMONES & MEMORY Heightened emotions (stress-related or otherwise) make for stronger memories. Flashbulb memories are clear memories of emotionally significant moments or events Scott Barbour/ Getty Images 211

113 FLASHBULB MEMORIES A recollection of an event that is so emotionally powerful that it is highly vivid and richly detailed (e.g., the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, the attack on Pearl Harbor, the attack on the Twin Towers in New York on September 11, 2001).

114 FLASHBULB MEMORIES

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