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Memory & Thought (Cognition) Chapter 11 (AP Review Book) The filing system  Pledge of Allegiance, Yankees starting line-up, 3rd grade, Lines from your favorite movie, State capitals, First love  Going beyond memory, how do we think?  How do we solve problems?  How do we store memories? Memory  Memory: capacity to register, store, and recover information over time (learning)  Cognition – all the mental activities associated with thinking, knowing and remembering information  Metacognition- thinking about how you think Theories of Memory  Molecular Theory (James McConnell)  Memory stored in RNA molecules  EX: Flatworm experiment McConnell made the astonishing discovery that memory has an identifiable chemical basis. He trained flatworms to run mazes, and noted how long it took to do so. Then McConnell took the trained worms and ground them up and fed them to untrained worms. The untrained worms learned to run the maze a lot faster than the original worms had, apparently demonstrating that there was some sort of information in the trained worms that survived being ground up and ingested. The hypothesis was that the information was somehow encoded in RNA molecules, and could be physically transferred from one individual to another. Information Processing Model  This is information processing model: compare your mind to a computer  3 steps  Encoding – input received from our sensory receptors  Storage – retain info in our brains for sometime (range: 1 second to a lifetime)  Retrieval- when needed we can access it Levels of Processing  Robert Lockhart and Fergus Craik – Levels of Processing Model  How long and how well we remember information depends on how deeply we process the information when we encode it  A. Shallow Processing - we assign NO relevance to information we store at this level, includes superficial sensory information that emphasizes physical characteristics, like lines, curves or sensory stimuli  B. Semantic Encoding – deeper level, emphasizes the meaning of verbal input, can be passed to short or long term memory Levels of Processing Cont.  C. Deep processing – when we attach meaning to information and create associations between new and old information/memories  Best way to remember a new person’s names at a social event  For Example - “Hi Sam, I am Megan” (in your head your thinking, Sam- cool name, the only Sam I know is Sam Booth and he is hot, this guy is kinda hot too! Hello Sam!) Creating associations between new memory and old memories is called – Elaboration Processing information deemed important or relevant more deeply by relating the new information to ourselves, making it easier to recall – self-reference effect or self-referent encoding Atkinson-Shiffrin 3 Stage Model of Memory  We have 3 different memory systems characterized by time frames  1) Sensory memory – memory system that holds external events from the senses for up to a few seconds  2) Short-term memory – “working memory”, 20 seconds before forgotten, capacity is 7 + or + 2  3) Long-term memory – relatively permanent storage with unlimited capacity Atkinson-Shiffrin 3 Stage Model of Memory Cont.  1) Sensory Memory: TERMS TO DEFINE AND KNOW!          Visual encoding Iconic memory Acoustic encoding Echoic memory Selective attention Automatic processing Parallel processing Effortful processing Feature extraction Atkinson-Shiffrin 3 Stage Model of Memory Cont.  2) Short Term Memory: TERMS TO DEFINE AND KNOW! Think of examples of each too!         Rehearsal Maintenance rehearsal Elaborative rehearsal Chunking Mnemonic devices – Method of loci – Peg word system – Many of the above strategies help convert info from short term to long-term Atkinson-Shiffrin 3 Stage Model of Memory Cont.  3) Long Term Memory: TERMS TO DEFINE AND KNOW! Think of examples of each too!  Subdivided into 2 Types:  1) Explicit memory (or declarative)  Semantic memory  Episodic memory  2) Implicit memory (or nondeclarative)  Procedural memory Organization of Memories  TERMS TO DEFINE AND KNOW! Think of examples of each too!  1)HierarchiesConcepts Prototypes 2) Semantic Networks 3) Schemas Script4) Connectionism - Related Memory Terms  TERMS TO DEFINE AND KNOW! Think of examples of each too!  Artificial Intelligence (AI) –  Neural network  Parallel processing model Biology of Long-term Memory  TERMS TO DEFINE AND KNOW! Think of examples of each too!  Long-term Potentiation (LPT)  Flashbulb memory  Thalamus  Hippocampus  Anterograde amnesia  Retrograde amnesia  Cerebellum Retrieving Memories  TERMS TO DEFINE AND KNOW! Think of examples of each too!  Retrieval – the process of getting information out of storage  Recognition  Recall  Reconstruction Summarize Ebbinghaus’ Forgetting Curve Theory(131) Also define these terms related to his research: savings method, overlearning effect, serial positioning effect, primacy effect and recency effect Retrieving Memories  TERMS TO DEFINE AND KNOW! Think of examples of each too!  Retrieval Cues Priming Encoding specificity principle  Context- dependent memory effect Mood congruence –  State-dependent -  Distributed practice  Massed practice - Retrieval, Reconstruction & Cues  TERMS TO DEFINE AND KNOW! Think of examples of each too!  Repression – (Freud)  Confabulation  Summarize Elizabeth Loftus’ Theory on Confabulation (eye witness testimony)  Misinformation effect  Misattribution error Retrieval + Interference = Forgetting  TERMS TO DEFINE AND KNOW! Think of examples of each too!  Forgetting – the inability to retrieve information  Tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon  Interference  Proactive interference  Retroactive interference Language Thinking & Problem Solving Obstacles to Problem Solving Biases Creativity Sensory Memory:  Echoic Memory  Holds auditory information for approximately 1 second  EX: Teacher asks OFF TASK student a question  Iconic memory –  Form of sensory memory that holds visual information Long-Term Memory: 2 Types  Explicit (declarative) Memory – conscious memory we recall as needed (facts, events)  Example- episodic, semantic Implicit (nondeclarative) Memory – unintentional memories, don’t realize we know it until we do it Example – procedural Explicit Memory: 2 Types  1. Semantic Memory  Memory of factual knowledge about the world, concepts, definitions, and grammar  EX: Spelling, Xmas. Independence Day  2. Episodic Memory  Memories of one’s personal experiences in life  EX: 1st date & kiss, personal diary Implicit Memory  Procedural Memory  Memories of actions, skills, operations, not requiring conscious recollection  ITS AUTOMATIC  EX: Throwing a ball, riding a bike, tying a tie, juggling, driving, muscle memory Unique Type of Memory Yet another specific type of memory: Eidetic Memory (“photographic memory”)  Retain detailed visual image for several minutes, or longer, like Sheldon Cooper Review: What type of memory do these terms fall under?  Selective Attention  Feature Extraction  Effortful Processing  Parallel processing  Automatic Prcessing Review: What type of memory do these terms fall under?  Chunking  Rehearsal Stages of Memory Short-term Memory to Long-term Memory HOW can we do this? Chunking Rehearsal Peg word System Mnemonic device – story, visual, rhyming, acronyms Method of Loci Short-Term Memory EXERCISE  Please read the word aloud as a class  After all words are complete you will be instructed to do something! Short-term memory  Peach  Clock  Book  Brick  Sword  Bed  Car  Salt  Enemy  Flower  Mirror  Calendar  Shoe  Airplane  Thermometer Stages of Memory  Encoding  Storing information in memory by making mental representation that brain can register  50 states in 1 minute  Activity  On a separate/scrap piece of paper  List the 50 states!  You have 1 minute, GO! Stages of Memory  Encoding/Retrieving strategies in LTM  A very simple illustration of the fact that people encode and search for information in predictable ways  Please read lists of states, in order originally written.   Familiar patterns  Alphabetical order  Region  Similarity of name (“New”) Familiar ways to individual (Systematic)  Where one has lived, a significant event took place, NFL teams Mnemonic Devices  Pegword  Narrative chaining  Rhyming Chunking?  Here is a list of numbers  17761234201143212323 Now list the numbers Now look at the list one more time 1776 1234 2011 4321 2323 Now list again  CHUNKING MAKES SENSE Maze Stages of Memory  Levels of processing  Maintenance rehearsal (shallow processing)  Repetition  Elaborative Rehearsal (Deep processing)  Making associations between new & old information  Serial Position Effect  Primacy Effect – tend to remember beginning  Recency Effect – tend to remember the end Stages of Memory  3. Long-Term Memory  Storing almost unlimited amounts of information over long periods of time  LTM information organized by categories and features  Who is on the $10 dollar bill?  What direction is Lincoln facing? Long-Term Memory Exercise  Whose portrait is on the $10 bill… Hamilton  Is Lincoln facing to the right or left on the penny? Simon Simon Anyone?  http://neave.com/simon/ Retrieval of Information  Key to retrieval is organization  Recognition  Identify previously learned information  EX: Photographs, Objective type tests, 7 dwarfs  Name the 7 dwarfs Retrieval of Information  Recall  Active reconstruction of memory   EX: Essay tests Confabulation  Unconsciously filling in memory gaps  Eye witness testimony  Schemas  Learned generalizations about objects, events, and people  A cognitive framework or concept that helps organize & interpret information  Created based on expectations by past experiences Schemas & Constructive Memory  Rumor Chain  Does long-term memory get distorted during encoding or retrieval by prior knowledge, particularly by schemas about the world, which include gender role expectations and other bias?  5 people to the hall!!  Do not laugh when errors are made Rumor Chain Story  A Boeing 747 had just taken off from the Dallas-Fort Worth Airport for Chicago when a passenger near the rear of the aircraft announced that the plane was being taken over by the People’s Revolution Army for the liberation of the oppressed. The hijacker then held a 22-caliber pistol to the head of James Buckner, a flight attendant, and forced him to open the door to the cockpit. There, the hijacker confronted the pilot, Melanie Adams, and ordered her to change course for Mexico. The pilot radioed the Dallas-Fort Worth Airport Air Traffic Control Center to report the situation, but then suddenly hurled the microphone a the hijacker, who fell backward through the open cockpit door and onto the floor, where angry passengers took over from there. The plane landed back at the Dallas-Fort Worth Airport a few minutes later and the hijacker was arrested. Rumor Chain Story  Errors made in story?  Did the description get shorter?  Were details left out? (Name of Airport, terrorist group)  This is called leveling  The descriptions will reflect the tellers’ schemas  EX: Pilots are men, women are flight attendants Individual Family Interviews  Homework!  Boy Niece Sister  Dolls Dance Aunt  Female Beautiful Daughter  Young Cute Hair  Dress Date Pretty Primacy & Recency Effect  How many people recalled the word “girl” = Constructive memory!  Recall scores should be…  Serial Positioning Effect  Primacy (best at the beginning of the list)  Recency (best at the end of the list)  The work of Herman Ebbinghaus Forgetting  Forgetting  Inability to retrieve information in Long Term Memory  Herman Ebbinghaus- “Forgetting Curve”  Steep decline initially then gradual decline  Conducted one of the 1st studies of retention and forgetting in the late 1800s. He learned a large number of nonsense syllables, 3-letter combinations that had no meaning, studying the material until he could recite it perfectly. He then, tested himself on what he remembered after certan periods of time had elapsed. Ebbinghaus Forgetting Curve Forgetting  Encoding Failure  Inadequate retrieval cues poorly encoded info  Decay  Memory traces weaken over time Forgetting  Interference (Inhibition) Theory  Memories inhibit retrieval of other memories  Proactive Interference  Prior info inhibits retrieval of new memories, can’t remember the new  ( you move, asked your address you give old one) Retroactive Interference  New inhibits retrieval of prior memories, cant remember older info  (insert example here) Repression  Freudian Defense Mechanism  Unpleasant experiences are kept out of consciousness and cannot be retrieved voluntarily  EX: False accusation based in repressed memories Memory: The Unreliable Witness  Read handout Amnesia  Causes  Organic: Head injury, physical trauma or disease  Rapid forgetting  New information fades from memory with a few minutes  Old memories, such as those from childhood, are retained  Permanent Amnesia  Psychogenic: Mental disorder, post-traumatic stress, defense mechanisms  Sometimes called Traumatic Amnesia  Loss of one’s identity and personal history without obvious brain injury  Rare  Some never recover past memories and have to start new lives Amnesia  Anterograde  Forgetting events that follow an injury or trauma  People find themselves constantly forgetting information, people or events after a few seconds or minutes  Data does not transfer successfully from their conscious shortterm memory into permanent long-term memory  Retrograde  Forgetting events that occurred before injury or trauma  The loss of pre-existing memories to conscious recollection  The person may be able to memorize new things that occur after the onset of amnesia  Unable to recall some or all of their life or identity prior to the onset. Movies about amnesia  Memento  50 first dates (Organic Amnesia, Anterograde Amnesia) Brain Diseases  Alzheimer’s  Alzheimer’s disease is a chronic brain disease that gradually erodes an individual’s memory, intellectual abilities and personality.  During the early stages, the most obvious symptom is an inability to learn and remember new information.  In advanced stages, the ability to think, speak or perform such basic tasks as getting dressed or eating is severely impaired. The time between diagnosis and death typically ranges from seven to 10 years. Brain Diseases  Dementia  Dementia is a loss of brain function that occurs with certain diseases. It affects memory, thinking, language, judgment, and behavior.