BChap 1
BChap 1
Chapter 1
What is Memory?
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Psychological Theories
Theories are comparable to maps, helping to:
Summarize knowledge in a simple and structured manner
Pose new, testable questions that advance further discovery
Processes
Neurons
m
Molecules
The practice of explaining
complex phenomena in terms Atoms
of lower-level processes
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A Brief History of Learning and
Memory
Concurrent
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19th Century Germany
Ebbinghaus (1850-1909)
Nonsense syllables
PIM DAG ZOL CEK
Learning curve – massed vs spaced practice
Forgetting curve – forgetting occurs rapidly
Overlearning – studying after something is learned
Savings – decreased effort needed to relearn
Bartlett
(1932) used multiple repetition of recalled material
to study distortions over time.
Participants
were given a 328 word Native American folk
tale “The War of the Ghosts” to read twice and then
reproduce 15 minutes later and also hours to months later.
Total recall declined.
What was recalled was shaped by the need to form a coherent
understandable story in the context of their own cultural knowledge
(schemata – concepts).
He considered memory an active process of construction.
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Contributions of Gestalt Psychology
A behaviorist
approach to the learning of verbal
materials (words, sentences, stories).
Developed from Ebbinghaus’s work.
In the learning
phase subjects see
pairs of items.
Recorder of experience
Wax tablet Interconnections
Record player
Switchboard
Writing pad
Network
Tape recorder
Video camera
Jumbled Storage
Organized storage Birds in an aviary
House Purse
Library Junkdrawer
Dictionary
Garbage can
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Metaphors Emphasizing Specific
Aspects of Memory
Temporal Availability Forgetting of Details
Conveyor belt Leaky bucket
Cow’s stomach
Content Addressability
Acid bath
Lock and key
Tuning fork Active processing
Workbench
Reconstruction
Computer program
Rebuilding a dinosaur
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The Information Processing
Metaphor
Like a computer, human memory consists of three
interacting components:
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Atkinson and Shiffrin's (1968)
Modal Model
Unlike a unitary, associative memory system, the modal model
assumes multiple memory structures:
Information from the external environment is perceived and then very briefly
stored in sensory memory, which is considered to be a perceptual, rather than
a purely mnemonic process
Information is then passed to a limited-capacity, short-term memory store
Finally, information can be encoded in the unlimited long-term store, more or
less permanently
Sensory Memory
The perceptual system stores the most
recently acquired static image just long
enough to integrate it with the next, in
order to create apparent motion
Iconic
Memory
Peripheral Recognition
Visual Store Buffer
Slide 10/07/08
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Long-Term Memory (LTM)