COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY

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COGNITIVE  PSYCHOLOGY   MEMORY  

THE  TRADITIONAL  VIEW  OF  MEMORY :  ‘MULTISTORE  Mview ODEL’  (ATKINSON  &  SHIFFRIN,  1968)   The traditional of memory: •

Theories  consider   both  the  architecture   (way  the  system  is  & organized)   and  t1968) he  processes  (activities   ‘Multistore model’  (Atkinson Shiffrin, occurring  within  the  system).  They  often  are  based  around  encoding,  storage,  and  retrieval  

SENSORY STORES Eg Iconic memory

ATTENTION

DECAY

SHORT-TERM MEMORY

DISPLACEMENT

REHEARSAL

LONG-TERM MEMORY

INTERFERENCE

NB:  “Box  and  arrow  model”:   Boxes= memory stores; arrows = processes

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Traditional  view:  short  term  processes  very  different  from  long  term  !  multi-­‐store  models  (as   opposed  to  unitary-­‐store  models  where  this  distinction  is  less  clear)     Structural  view  of  memory:    Short-­‐term  and  long-­‐term  memory  rely  on  separate  memory  systems   with  different  properties  (structures  that  have  different  qualities,  may  exist  in  different  parts  of  the   brain)  

DEFINING  MEMORY:  KINGS  OF  KNOWLEDGE   •

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st the

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7/30/2013

Sensory  memory:  a  brief   literal   copy  of  an  event   –     The traditional view of memory: o Iconic  memory:  Iconic  memory  involves  the  memory  of  visual  stimuli.  It  is  a  type  of  sensory   ‘Multistore model’  (Atkinson & Shiffrin, 1968) memory  that  lasts  very  briefly  before  quickly  fading.  Sperling’s  findings  suggest  that  iconic   memory  lasts  only  0.5  seconds.  Others  suggest  this  may  be  an  underestimate  (more  like   1600ms)   ATTENTION REHEARSAL o Echoic   memory:   auditory   stimuli.  “SHORT-TERM Playback  facility”   typically  2-­‐4  LONG-TERM seconds.   SENSORY STORES EgmIconic memory Short  term   emory:   “Buffer”  for  temporary  MEMORY maintenance  of  information   MEMORY Long-­‐term  memory   o Facts/concepts:  e.g.  Who  wrote  Romeo  &  Juliet?    Semantic  !  Abstract  conceptual   knowledge   is  independent  of  how/when/whether   memory  was  INTERFERENCE stored   DECAY DISPLACEMENT o Episodes/events:  e.g.  Where  did  you  go  to  school?  Episodic  !  Autobiographical,  specific   7/30/2013 memory  of  particular  time  and  place.  You  were  an  active  participant.     Structural view of memory: o Procedures:   e.g.  Driving  a  car,  typing,  reading,  recognizing  faces.  Procedural  !  knowledge  of   Short-term and long-term memory rely on separate memory how  systems to  do  things,   often  unable  to  be  verbalized  or  consciously  accessed   with different properties

TRADITIONAL  VIEW  OF  TYPES  OF  KNOWLEDGE:  STM  VC  LTM    

Traditional view of types of knowledge: STM vs LTM SHORT TERM MEMORY (STM) Capacity

Limited 7+ 2

LONG-TERM MEMORY (LTM) Unlimited

Short-term memory (STM): Decays within 30 Forgetting due to seconds if not interference Letter span tasks rehearsed rather than decay

Rate of forgetting

• How many items do people normally Type of code Phonological Semantic remember? • What if they have to count out loud while remembering?

 

SHORT-­‐TERM  MEMORY  (STM):  LETTER  SPAN  TASKS   • • • • •

How  many  items  do  people  normally  remember?  7  +/-­‐  2   What  if  they  have  to  count  out  loud  while  remembering?  Reduces  ability  to  rehearse  the  letters   What  if  letters  sound  the  same?  The  sounds  get  confused  within  the  rehearsal  process   What  if  words  instead  of  letters?  Still  7  +/-­‐  2.  Amount  of  syllables  would  make  a  difference  though.   Simon  (1974)  found  that  the  span  in  chunks  was  less  with  larger  chunks  than  smaller  

MULTI-­‐STORE  MODEL:  ENCODING  PROCESS   • •



How  does  information  get  into  LTM?   Traditional  view:     o It  must  be  attended  to  and  registered  in  iconic  memory   o REHERSAL  required  to  maintain/transfer  to  LTM   o Repetition/rehearsal  critical  to  effective  memory  (Ebbinghaus,  1885  –  list  of  nonsense  words)   o But  how/why  does  this  facilitate  encoding?   " Repetition  alone  not  sufficient  (Craik  &  Watkins,  1973  –  people  presented  with   words  one  at  a  time,  their  task  to  remember  the  last  word  that  started  with  G)   " Memory  better  when  people  rehearse  silently  rather  than  out  loud  (Kellas  et  al.  1975   –  compared  memory  performance  between  groups  –  memory  was  better  in  the   group  that  recited  silently)   " Not  JUST  rehearsal   Levels  of  processing  hypothesis  (Craik  &  Lockhart,  1975)  –  critical  phenomena  in  memory   o Investigated  incidental  memory  (rather  than  intentional  memory)  for  material  presented   with  different  “orienting  tasks”  (weren’t  told  that  they  were  going  to  be  tested  on  memory)   " How  many  letters  does  this  word  have?  –  (Structural)  shallow  processing   " Does  this  word  rhyme  with  treat?  (Phonological  task)   " Do  you  find  these  in  a  city?  (Semantic  task)  –  deep  processing   o Memory  best  when  encoding  task  requires  deep  rather  than  shallow  processing   o NOT  due  simply  to  longer  encoding  time  for  deeper  encoding  tasks   o ENCODING  DOES  NOT  DEPEND  SOLELY  ON  REHEARSAL     o BUT  how  do  we  know  if  orienting  task  requires  “deep  processing”?     o See  whether  it  yields  better  memory     o CIRCULAR?!  

WHAT  DEFINES  “DEEP”  PROCESSING?   •





Memory  is  better  for  material  that  is  semantically  organized  at  encoding   o By  requiring  categorisation  at  encoding     o When  more  elaboration  is  encouraged  during  encoding     o When  material  is  self-­‐relevant     But  why  does  deep  processing  help?   o Depth  of  processing  describes  rather  than  explains  effectiveness  of  memory       o What  is  the  form  of  existing  knowledge?     o How  is  knowledge  represented  in  the  mind  (brain)?     o How  is  this  knowledge  retrieved?     BUT  deep  processing  does  not  ALWAYS  yield  better  memory  

RETRIEVAL  PROCESSES   •



• •

How  do  we  retrieve  information  encoded  in  LTM?     o Explicit  voluntary  retrieval  e.g.  memory  search     o Memory  activated  by  retrieval  cue:  familiar;  “just  know”    -­‐  e.g.  friends  name   Measuring  memory     o Free  recall  task:  report  items  from  earlier  study  episode     o Recognition  task:  Select  previously  studied  items  from  mixture  of  old  and  new  items     o Recognition  (nearly  always)  better  than  recall  Why?     Recall  task  does  not  provide  any  (explicit)  cue     Recognition  task  provides  a  cue  (the  studied  item)  which  can  activate    (“prime”)  memory  network    

‘Transfer  appropriate  processing’  principle   (Morris, Bransford & Franks, 1977

Memory  network  can  also  be  primed  by  the  study  context  e.g.  Godden  &    Baddeley  (1975)*     Encoding  specificity  principle  (Tulving  &  Thomson,  1973)     Transfer  appropriate  processing:  Memory  performance  usually  best  for  “deeply”  encoded  items.  BUT   Retrieval is best when there is a match between the also  depends  on  the  “match”  between  the  processes  required  at  encoding  and  retrieval  (Morris  et   processes al.,  1977)*     required at encoding and retrieval Adapted from Morris, Bransford & Franks (1977) “shallow”   processing yields 0.9 better memory 0.8 WHEN it matches 0.7 task context 0.6 Proportion recognized

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0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2

0.1

Standard test Rhyming test

Standard: did you see it before? Rhyme Semantic Rhyming: did you Orienting task see a word that EAGLE: Does it rhyme with legal? Is it a bird rhymes with regal?   o When  semantic  encoding,  best  cues  relate  to  meaning,  not  surface  form.  E.g.  ‘The  fish   attacked  the  swimmer’  !  shark  a  better  retrieval  cue  than  fish   Godden  &  Baddeley  (1975):  Participants  learned  words  either  on  land  or  underwater;  and  were  asked   to  later  recall  the  words  on  land  or  underwater   o Recall  best  when  the  contexts  matched   o Recognition  unaffected  by  context   o Different  retrieval  tasks  probe  different  aspects  of  memory   o Evidence  for  the  encoding  specificity  principle  –  what  we  encode  is  specific  to  the  context  in   which  we  learn  it     0



EXPLICIT  VS  IMPLICIT  MEMORY  TASKS   •



Traditional  approach:  Explicit  memory  tasks   o e.g.  Recall/Recognition   o Subjects  explicitly  told  to  remember  items  from  previous  list  !  intentional  retrieval     o Memory  performance  shows  levels  of  processing  and  transfer-­‐appropriate  processing  effects   Implicit  memory  tasks   o NOT  told  to  try  to  remember,  just  to  perform  a  task  !  incidental   o e.g.  fragment  completion,  stem  completion,  perceptual  identification  !  compare   performance  for  old  and  new  items  to  infer  memory   o Repetition  priming  also  an  index  of  implicit  memory  

STRENGTHS  OF  MULTI-­‐STORE  MODEL   •



 

Traditional  information  processing  approach   o Highlights  conceptual  distinctions  between  different  types  of  memory  that  vary  in  temporal   duration,  storage  capacity,  forgetting  mechanisms     o Consistent  with  evidence  of  double  dissociations  between  the  effects  of  brain  damage  on   STM  and  LTM  (amnesia  –  LTM  affected  but  not  STM)   Central  assumptions       o Cognitive  processing  consists  of  transforming  information  into  “higher”,  more  durable  forms   of  memory       o !  Processing  is  “bottom  up”:  low  level  (perceptual)  processing  precedes  high  level   (cognitive)  processing       o !  attention  necessary  to  “select”  information  from  sensory  memory  and  for  high  level   processing    

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