Memory How can you increase your memory? How do you process information? Encoding - Getting information in Storage - Retaining information Retrieval - Getting information out Encoding Storage Retrieval Encoding - Getting information in How can you get it into your brain? Types of encoding Visual - Images are more easily remembered than abstract concepts Acoustic - Sounds (hearing the word) Songs Semantic - Meaning - (for words) Self-reference effect You remember items that refer to yourself Liberty What is the best way to study? Spaced repetition Spacing Effect Ebbinghaus’s retention curve We retain information better when study time is spaced out The amount remembered depends on the time spent learning Spaced study beats cramming - E.g. 12 - 5 minute segments beat one hour of study How fast does your memory decay? Why does repetition help you remember? Brain (synaptic) changes Long-term potentiation (LTP) Stimulating neurons increased efficiency Sending neuron released its neurotransmitter more easily Receptor sights may increase. May explain why experience and repetition can increase memory. Why can you instantly remember something? Flashbulb memories 9-11 Space Shuttle Challenger Car accident What is the Serial Position Effect? We remember the first and last items better than ones in the middle. E.g. Grocery list How can you remember better ?Mnemonics - Encoding Imagery Mnemonics (Greek for memory) Method of Loci Chunking License plate Phone # 1-800-HOLIDAY Words Association E.g. Grocery list Mnemonics (cont.) “Peg word” system Numbers into pictures 1 = Bun 2 = Shoe 3 = Tree 4 = Door 5 = Hive 6 = Sticks 7 = Heaven 8 = Gate 9 = Swine 10 = Hen Attach items to be remembered to the pictures Do you remember? What types of encoding are there to help you remember? What two things did we learn from the Ebbinghaus retention curve to help you remember? What are flashbulb memories? If you list your advantages on a resume, where do you put your most important ones you want remembered? How could you use the peg word system? Storage - Retaining information Iconic (sensory) memory - Movie frames Tenths of a second Short term memory - Phone # Few minutes Long term memory - Experiences Years Long term memories Test Trip to Egypt Bike riding Something was fun Retrieval - (Remembering) What things help you remember? Retrieval cues Priming Memories are held by a web of associations identify one strand and it leads to others Associations E.g. Wedding song Retrieval cues can be sights, sounds, smells and tastes What causes you to forget? Encoding failure You did not learn it Names are forgotten because they were never encoded. Storage decay Penny example Penny What interferes with memory? Retrieval Failure You can not remember it Proactive (forward-acting) interference Earlier learning reduces later learning Retroactive (backward-acting) interference Later learning reduces earlier learning Retrieval Failure (Cont.) What interferes with memory? Do you remember? How does priming relate to retrieval cues? What causes you to forget? What is proactive and retroactive memory interference? Memory Construction Do you remember things that never happened? Misinformation effect Given misinformation about an event someone experienced, they misremember the event. E.g. After repeatedly hearing false detailed accounts of something that happened to you, you begin to mistakenly “remember” that these events actually occurred. Source amnesia (Source misattribution) You remember something as real, but forget the source of the memory (e.g. a movie). (You forgot that they were told to you) Repressed or constructed memories Therapeutic techniques such as guided imagery can easily encourage construction of false memories. Memories “recovered” under hypnosis or drugs are particularly unreliable. Do you remember? If Sally is falsely told, usually repeatedly and in detail, that she was abused as a child; might she begin to remember abuse that never happened? If someone says, ”I remember this, but I forgot where I heard it”. What happened? Can guided imagery, hypnosis and drugs be used to recover reliable memories?