Transcript Document
Mnemonic Strategies
Chunking
Method of Loci
Peg Word Mnemonic
Chunking
Grouping elements into “chunks”
Chase and Ericcson’s subjects
Chunked digits into running times
Remembered up to 82 digits!
Not as effective as more elaborative strategies
Method of Loci
Based upon visual imagery
Imagine a grocery list
(eggs, milk, cheese, bread, butter)
Imaging items placed in a common scene
To recall, mentally stroll through scene
Bizarreness / distinctiveness
Peg Word Mnemonic
Uses prememorized list (e.g., rhyme)
One is a bun ==>
Two is a shoe ==>
Three is a tree ==>
Four is a door ==>
Acronyms
Create “word” from beginning letters
Create a limerick from beginning letters
OOOTTAFAGVAH – 12 Cranial nerves
Why Do Mnemonics
Devices Work?
Provide structure for learning
Provide durable trace (less interference)
Provide retrieval structure
Which Mnemonic is the Best?
Roediger (1980)
Interaction of Encoding and
Retrieval Processes
Anderson & Pichert (1978)
Participants read a story about the activities of
two boys at home either from the point of view of
a burglar or a homebuyer
Later the participants were asked to remember as
much as possible about the story they read
The point of view affected what participants
recalled
Homebuyers were more likely to remember that the
basement was musty
Burglars were more likely to remember the coin
collection and color TV
To Understand Memory
Processes
Need
to understand encoding
processes, retrieval processes, and
how they function together for short
term storage (STM) and long term
storage (LTM)
Encoding Processes
Creating
an acoustic code
What it sounds like
Creating a semantic code
What it means
Creating a visual code
What it looks like
Encoding Types and STM
Type of code may rely on type of task
STM refers to memory that needs to be
held temporarily
Evidence exists for a variety of encoding
types for STM
Evidence for Acoustic Encoding
in STM
Conrad (1964)
Visually
present a series of letters
Ask participants to write the order letters are
presented
What types of errors are made?
Conrad (1964)
Found evidence for the use of an acoustic code
in STM
Participants made acoustic errors
F
Not visual errors
E
for S, B for V, P for B
for F, O for Q, R for P
Participants encoded items acoustically even
though stimuli were presented visually
Shulman (1970)
Evidence for semantic encoding in STM
Participants viewed 10-word lists
Given a recognition test using visually
represented "probe words" which were either:
Homonyms
- e.g. "bawl" for "ball"
Synonyms - e.g. "talk" for "speak"
Identical to the original word
Shulman (1970) Results
The Homonym and Synonym probes produced
similar error rates - this suggests that an equal
amount of acoustic and semantic processing
must be taking place
Homonyms
Synonyms
Identical
- e.g. "bawl" for "ball"
- e.g. "talk" for "speak"
to the original word
Posner & Keele (1967)
Evidence for visual encoding in STM
Letter
matching task
Two letters separated by brief interval
Participant had to indicate if same letter
A-a Yes
A-A Yes
A-M No
Measure
reaction time
Posner & Keele (1967) Results
If letters were the same visually (a-a)
participants were faster than if the
letters were not the same visually (A-a)
Results indicate that visual code was
also present for STM
Encoding Types & LTM
Type of code may rely on type of task
LTM refers to memory that may be held
permanently
Evidence exists for a variety of encoding
types for LTM
Semantic Encoding in LTM
Grossman & Eagle (1970)
Study
41 different words
Given recognition test after delay
9 of the distractors were semantically
related to words on list
9 of the distractors were not
False alarms for each type: 1.83 of
synonyms, but only 1.05 of unrelated
Visual Encoding in LTM
Frost (1972)
Participants studied 16 drawings
Manipulated visual orientation and semantic category
After a delay, participants were asked if they had
studied an object with the same name as the test object
Reaction time was measured
Participants responded faster to identical drawings than
drawings in a different orientation
This result indicates visual encoding occurred
Acoustic Encoding in LTM
Evidence of very long-term memory for
songs
Rubin (1977)
Participants recall more of the text when
provided with the melody of a well-learned
song ("Star Spangled Banner") than when
given no cue
Transfer from STM to LTM
Consolidation
Integrating
new information into stored
information
Disruption of consolidation is studied in
amnesiacs
ECT
patients (Squire)
Principles to Strengthen Memory
Elaborative rehearsal is better than
maintenance rehearsal
Distributed practice is better than massed
practice
Spacing
effect
Organizing information to enhance
memory
Why Does Distributed Practice
Work?
REM Theory
The
more REM sessions
following study sessions, the
more consolidation that occurs
Multiple encoding contexts
theory
Multiple
study sessions lead to
multiple types of encoding, thus
more possibility of matching
during test conditions
Prospective Memory
The ability to remember a future intention
Buying
bread on your way home from work
Going to the dentist on Wednesday
Retrospective memory is memory of the
past
Retrieval Processes
Getting information back out
Multiple processes can be used to enhance
retrieval
Different strategies are used for short term
storage and long term storage
Matching the type of processes done during
encoding with the type of processes done at
retrieval increases success
Retrieval from STM
Is the search serial or parallel?
Serial
indicates one by one search
Parallel means all items are processed at once
Is the search exhaustive or self-terminating?
Exhaustive
indicates that all items in the set are
examined
Self-terminating means that after target is found the
search stops
Studying Searching in STM
Saul Sternberg (1967)
Memorize a set of
numbers (6,3,8,2,7)
Shown a probe digit
Participant must
indicate if the probe
was in the set
Reaction time to
respond is measured
2
6,3,8,2,7
Yes
Sternberg (1967)
3 critical factors manipulated
How
many items were in the set the
participants had to memorize
Whether the probe was in the list
The probe’s location in the set
Sternberg (1967)
Possible Result Patterns
A represents parallel
processing
B illustrates serial
processing
C illustrates exhaustive
serial processing
D illustrates selfterminating serial
processing
Sternberg’s Conclusion
A serial exhaustive model
But….
Corcoran
(1971) proposed that a parallel
model could also explain the pattern found
Townsend (1971) stated it was mathematically
impossible to distinguish parallel from serial
Thus, both models still exist
If You Do Not Retrieve from
LTM…
Has the memory disappeared?
or
Is the memory still there but cannot
retrieve it (available, but not accessible)?
Evidence Supporting “Still There”
Theory Nelson (1971)
Paired associate List
43-house
67-dog
38-dress
77-sissors
Cued recall test
43- ________
67- ________
Two week delay
Subjects recalled 75% of
items on list
But focus was on 25% they
forgot.
Nelson (1971) Critical
Manipulation
If participants forgot “38-dress” and “77-sissors” then
participants relearned either same pairs or changed pairs
25%
“forgot”
Relearned
Results
Same
38-dress
77-sissors
38-dress
77-sissors
78%
Changed
38-dress
77-sissors
38-apple 77kettle
43%
The better performance of participants in the same
condition indicate that there was some memory left for
“forgotten” items. Otherwise both groups would remember
the same amount.
What Contributes to Forgetting?
Decay theory
Memory
is weakened with disuse
Interference theory
Proactive:
old memories interfere with recall
of new information
Retroactive: new memories interfere with
recall of old information
Retroactive Interference from
LTM
Experiment
al group
Learn List A
Learn List B
Delay
Test for Memory
A
Control
group
Learn List A
------------
Delay
Test for Memory
A
The experimental group will remembers less material from
the tested list A compared to the control group
Information learned afterwards interferes with retrieval of
List A.
Proactive Interference from LTM
Experimental
group
Learn List A
Learn List B
Delay
Test for Memory B
Control
group
No study
Learn List B
Delay
Test for Memory B
The experimental group remembers less material from the
tested list B than the control group
Information previously learned (list A) interferes with
retrieval of List B
Your Cheatin’ Heart
Damn that
Proactive
interference!
Using a similar scenario, what
would retroactive interference
look like?
Melissa?!
Who’s
Melissa?!
Flashbulb Memories
Some researchers propose that
events that are particularly
surprising or arousing will yield
flashbulb memories
Where were you when the…
Challenger
explosion occurred?
OJ verdict was read?
JFK was assassinated?
Bombing of the twin towers?
Flashbulb Memories
Some research proposes good memory for
Place where you learned of information
What you were doing when you heard it
Where you heard the information
Emotions in self and others
The aftermath
from
Emotion and Memory
There is a strong relationship (.90) between
the emotionality and vividness of memory
This
does not mean that the memory is
accurate
Emotional events seem to be less resistant
to forgetting over time…
Perhaps
they are perceived better
Perhaps we think about them more
Flashbulb Memory Results
Neisser and Harsch (1992)
Tested
immediate memory for
Shuttle Explosion, and then
tested it again 3 years later
There was little agreement
with the two “memories”
despite the confidence of the
participants
Encoding Specificity
Memory is improved when information
available at encoding is also available at
retrieval
Encoding Specificity
Tulving (1983)
People
encode the context with the target
material
Physical match (class, diving, smell)
Emotional match (happy, depressed)
Understanding match (childhood amnesia,
under the influence of drugs match)
State Dependent Learning
Deep Sea Divers
40
% Correct Recall
36
32
Learn on Land
Learn UnderWater
28
24
20
Land
UnderWater
Recall
State Dependent Learning
Hypnotic Mood & Memory
90
% Retention
80
70
Learn Sad
Learn Happy
60
50
40
Happy
Sad
Recall Mood
State Dependent Learning
Drunk vs. Sober
5
Learn Sober
Learn Drunk
% Errors
4
3
2
1
Sober
Drunk
Recall
State Dependent learning, why
is it important?
Content addressable memory
Partial information helps in retrieval
Adaptive function of memory
Most relevant memories are most
accessible
Owens, Bower and Black
(1979)
Nancy arrived at the cocktail party. She looked around the room to see who was
there. She went to talk with her professor. She felt she had to talk to him but
was a little nervous about just what to say. A group of people started to play
charades. Nancy went over and had some refreshments. The hors d’oevres
were good but she was interested in talking to the rest of the people at the party.
After a while, she decided she’d had enough and left the party.
Some participants also heard that passage, but w/ this theme:
Nancy woke up feeling sick and she wondered if she really were pregnant. How
could she tell the professor she had been seeing? And the money was another
problem.
Participants were then asked to recall as much about the story as
they could
Owens, Bower and Black (1979)
Results
Theme
No Theme
Studied Propositions
29.2
20.3
Inferred Propositions
15.2
3.7
The “theme” offered some background information and
some retrieval cues, which increased recall.
However, the background info also led to more intrusions
(memory for information not present), such as “The
professor got Nancy pregnant.”
The 7 Sins of Memory
Daniel Schacter
Transience
Absent Mindedness
Blocking
Misattribution
Suggestibility
Bias
Persistence
Seven Sins of Memory
1) Transience
- The tendency to lose
access to information
across time, whether
through forgetting,
interference, or retrieval
failure
Transience
Occurs with all memory modalities
Memory fades from the specific to the
general or gist
Typical memories are overlaid
Aberrant memories stand out
Thanksgiving meal
What accounts for Transience?
•Shallow initial encoding
•Reduction in strength of
neural connections
•Retroactive interference
•Inappropriate retrieval
cues
How to mitigate transience
• Elaborate on incoming memories
• Multiple short exposures
• Keep a journal
• Seek unique experience
Seven Sins of Memory
2) Absent-mindedness Everyday memory failure in
remembering information and
intended activities, probably
caused by insufficient attention
or superficial, automatic
processing during encoding.
Absent Mindedness
Keys
Weapon blindness
Cell-phones and driving
Pizza guy
Mail letter
Medicine
Why does it occur
Insufficient processing
Secondary
task
Insufficient environmental cue
Prospective Memory
Event
based- When x happens y
Time based- Do x at y time
How to counteract
Attend at encoding
Use environmental cues
Teapot
Coffee
maker
Stickies
Seven Sins of Memory
3) Blocking Temporary retrieval
failure or loss of
access, such as the
tip-of-the-tongue
state, in either
episodic or semantic
memory.
Pop Quiz! Name that word
Metal or metal-tipped spear used in a contest of distance throwing
Yarn-died cotton fabric woven in stripes, checks, plaids, or solid
colors.
Mild or hot, red condiment often used on deviled eggs
Inscription on a tomb
Incombustible, chemical-resistant, material used for fireproofing
Navigational instrument used for measuring the angular elevation of
the sun or a star above the horizon
Heavy, broad-bladed knife or hatchet used especially by butchers
Crystalline sugar occurring naturally in fruits, honey, etc.
Blocking
Most common with names or abstract
obscure words
Can often remember
Gender
(Spanish, Italian, French etc.)
First and Last letters
Syllables
Ugly stepsister
Forget it!
Seven Sins of Memory
4) Misattribution
Remembering a
fact correctly
from past
experience but
attributing it to
an incorrect
source of context.
She looks
familiar, but
how do I
know her...?
Misattribution
John Doe 1 and John Doe 2
Elliot’s body shop, Junction
City, Kansas
“Robert Kling” AKA Timothy
McVeigh
1 day later
Army Sereant Michael
Hertig and Private Todd
Bunting
Seven Sins of Memory
5) Suggestibility - The tendency to
incorporate information provided
by others into your own
recollection and memory
representation.
Eyewitness testimony
Loftus -- subjects watched a video of a car accident
and then were asked “how fast was the car going
when it”
Smashed
Collided
Bumped
Hit
Contacted
40.8
39.3
38.1
34.0
31.8
Eyewitness testimony
Leading questions may bias the estimates
The questions may literally change the way
people remember the event
Exp 2: Subjects saw the video and were
asked “Smashed” or “hit”
Smashed est'd mph > Hit estd mph
Eyewitness testimony
1 Week subjects were later asked “did you see any
broken glass”?
Most answered “no” correctly, but
32% said yes if asked “Smashed”
14% said yes if asked “hit”
12% said yes in control group
The memory of the video and the question were fused
together into one memory
Eyewitness testimony
As time increased the memory was integrated so that
subjects couldn’t distinguish the event from effects of
questioning
Typical eyewitness testimony:
Occurs after long interval from event
After repeated questioning
After repeated retellings
Eyewitness testimony
How reliable is eyewitness testimony?
Difficult to know for sure, but people can’t
distinguish between “real events” and
“reconstructed memories”
Implications for “recovered memories” &
legal system
Should eyewitness testimony by itself be
considered sufficient to establish guilt?
Seven Sins of Memory
6) Bias - The tendency
for knowledge, beliefs,
and feelings to distort
recollection of
previous experiences
and to affect current
and future judgments
and memory.
Schemata
What we have experienced effects what will experience
Stored framework or body of knowledge
Aids interpretation
Biased information processing to relate new material to what we
already know
Alters way we perceive things
Individual differences in perception and memory
Reproductive vs. Reconstructive
Reproductive memory -- verbatim reproduction of
information
Reconstructive memory -- we remember by combining
the original material with existing schemata
If you hear a speech and later tell someone what was
said, can you report “verbatim” what was said?
Reconstructive Memory
Omissions - loss of information in recall due to
schemata; often specific, important details are
missing
Rationalize or Normalize - tendency to add
material to make recall more reasonable
fill in missing pieces
often fill in with correct info, but may fill in faulty
info
Split brain research
Seven Sins of Memory
7) Persistence - the
tendency to remember
facts or events, including
traumatic memories, that
one would rather forget,
that is, failure to forget
because of intrusive
recollections and
rumination.
Persistence
“Hot” Memories- charged with
emotion
Positive and Negative intrusions
Amygdala
Norepinepherine-Yohimbine!
Vices or Virtues?
Transience
Absent Mindedness
Blocking
Misattribution
Suggestibility
Bias
Persistence
The 7 Sins of Memory
Daniel Schacter
Transience
Absent Mindedness
Blocking
Misattribution
Suggestibility
Bias
Persistence