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Memory

Date post: 16-Jan-2015
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Memory The PowerPoint slides were developed by Mus Khairy (PhD), Stanford University at California. Educational ,Social Psychologists at German University at Cairo (GUC) unless otherwise noted on specific slides.
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Page 1: Memory

Memory

The PowerPoint slides were developed by Mus Khairy (PhD), Stanford University at California. Educational ,Social Psychologists at German University at Cairo (GUC) unless otherwise noted on

specific slides.

Page 2: Memory

Memory – internal record of some prior event or experience; a set of mental processes that receives, encodes, stores, organizes, alters, and retrieves information over time

Page 3: Memory

Remembering and Forgetting…w/ Phil Zimbardo from the “Discovering Psychology” series

Page 4: Memory

Stage 1Stage 1 - Sensory Memory is a brief representation of a stimulus while being processed in the sensory system

Stage 2Stage 2 - Short-Term Memory (STM) is working memoryLimited capacity (7 items)Duration is about 30 seconds

Stage 3Stage 3 - Long-Term Memory (LTM) is large capacity and long duration

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Page 6: Memory

Encoding – process of translating info into neural codes (language) that will be retained in memory

Storage – the process of retaining neural coded info over time

Retrieval – the process of recovering info from memory storage

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Two types of LTM Semantic memory refers to factual information Episodic memory refers to autobiographical

information as to where and when an event happened

Page 10: Memory

Retrieval Cue – a clue or prompt that helps stimulate recall and retrieval of a stored piece of information from long-term memory

2 types:1. Recognition2. Recall

1. Ziegarnik Effect

Page 11: Memory

Recognition is when a specific cue (face or name) is matched against LTM

Recall is when a general cue is used to search memory

Relearning - situation where person learns material a second time. •Quicker to learn material 2nd time

Page 12: Memory

Where were you when you first heard:That The WTC had been crashed into?

That the federal building had been bombed in Oklahoma City?

That Princess Diana had been killed in a car wreck?

Page 13: Memory

Bilateral damage tothe hippocampus results in anterogradeamnesia (Patient H.M.)

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Amygdala: emotional memory and memory consolidationBasal ganglia & cerebellum: memory for skills, habits and CC responsesHippocampus: memory recognition, spatial, episodic memory, laying down new declarative long-term memoriesThalamus, formation of new memories and working memoriesCortical Areas: encoding of factual memories, storage of episodic and semantic memories, skill learning, priming.

Page 15: Memory

Forgetting is the inability to recall previously learned information

Forgetting rate is steep just after learning and then becomes a gradual loss of recall

Page 16: Memory

Recall immediatelyafter learning

Recall several hoursafter learning

Recall from Recall from LTM STM

LTM

Primacy effect – remembering stuff at beginning of list better than middle

Recency Effect – remembering stuff at the end of list better than middle

Page 17: Memory

Distributed practice refers to spacing learning periods in contrast to massed practice in which learning is “crammed” into a single session

Distributed practice leads to better retention

Page 18: Memory

Proactive interference: old information interferes with recall of new information

Retroactive interference: new information interferes with recall of old information

Decay theory: memory trace fades with time

Motivated forgetting: involves the loss of painful memories (protective memory loss)

Retrieval failure: the information is still within LTM, but cannot be recalled because the retrieval cue is absent

Page 19: Memory

Tip-of the tongue phenomenon: person can’t easily recall the item, but shows some recall for its characteristics (“…it begins with the letter ….”)

Page 20: Memory

Amnesia is forgetting produced by brain injury or by traumaRetrograde amnesia refers to problems

with recall of information prior to a trauma

Anterograde amnesia refers to problems with recall of information after a trauma

Point of Trauma

Retrograde amnesiaAnterograde amnesia

Page 21: Memory

Reasons for inaccuracy of memory:Source amnesia: attribution of a memory

to the wrong source (e.g. a dream is recalled as an actual event)

Sleeper effect: a piece of information from an unreliable source is initially discounted, but is recalled after the source has been forgotten

Misinformation effect: we incorporate outside information into our own memories

Page 22: Memory

Mnemonic devices are strategies to improve memory by organizing informationMethod of Loci: ideas are associated with a place or part of a building

Peg-Word system: peg words are associated with ideas (e.g. “one is a bun”)

Word Associations: verbal associations are created for items to be learned


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