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MEMORY

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Title: MEMORY


1
MEMORY
  • Can be studied from 2 perspectives
  • Information-processing research (software)
  • uses computer concepts such as encoding, storage,
    and retrieval
  • Biological research (hardware)
  • maps the physical structures and wiring of the
    brain and nervous system
  • Each has produced an independent line of
  • research.

2
INFORMATION PROCESSING APPROACH SOFTWARE OF
MEMORY
  • its goal is to discover what people do with
    information from the time they perceive it until
    they use it
  • particularly suited to describing changes that
    take place over the lifespan
  • can distinguish between functions that change a
    great deal and those that change very little,
    either in one person or in comparison with another

3
INFORMATION PROCESSING APPROACH SOFTWARE OF
MEMORY (Contd)
  • assumes that people can handle only a limited
    amount of information at a given time
  • assumes that information that comes in through
    the senses is transformed by a series of mental
    processes into a form suitable for storage and
    later recall

4
INFORMATION PROCESSING APPROACH SOFTWARE OF
MEMORY (Contd)
  • Most information-processing studies are
  • cross-sectional
  • findings may reflect cohort differences rather
    than age-related changes

5
Processes Encoding, Storage and Retrieval
  • 3 step filing system encoding, storage,
  • retrieval
  • Before encoding
  • sensory input, attention, begin processing (do I
    want to keep this? for how long?)
  • encoding the process by which information is
    prepared for long-term storage and later
    retrieval
  • attaches a code or label to the information
    to prepare it for storage will be easier to find
    when needed
  • storage the process by, or location in which,
    memories are retained for future use

6
  • retrieval the process by which information is
    recalled from storage
  • The precise mechanisms involved in encoding,
  • storage, and retrieval may vary with the
    situation,
  • the type of information and how the information
    is
  • to be used. Difficulties in any of these steps
    may
  • impair memory.
  • the ability to retrieve newly encountered
    information seems to drop off with age
  • younger adults can remember word pairs or
    recognize pictures better than older people.

7
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8
  • More sophisticated strategies to encode
  • information for long-term storage are
  • Organization encoding strategy or mnemonic
    device, consisting of arranging or categorizing
    material to be remembered
  • Elaboration consisting of making associations,
    often between new information and information
    already in memory
  • the capacity of working memory to hold and
    process information is widely believed to shrink
    with age

9
  • Encoding Problems
  • older adults seem to be less efficient than
    younger ones at encoding new information to make
    it easier to remember (e.g. less likely to
    spontaneously arrange material in alphabetical
    order to create mental associations)
  • older adults can improve their encoding skills
    through training or instruction (how much they
    benefit depends on task)
  • older peoples encoding seems to be less precise,
    may reflect less education

10
  • key factor complexity of the task (effort)
  • Tasks that require reorganization, elaboration,
    or mental manipulation show the greatest falloff
  • Some researchers suggest that as people get older
    they have less attentional resources to focus on
    a task

11
  • Storage Problems
  • stored material may deteriorate to the point
    where retrieval becomes difficult or impossible
  • a small increase in storage failure may occur
    with age

12
  • Retrieval Problems
  • older adults may be able to answer a multiple
    choice question but not an open-ended one
    (recognition)
  • have more trouble recalling items (pure recall
    vs. cued recall)
  • do as well in recognizing items they know
  • takes longer to search their memories
  • age differences are minimized when older adults
  • are familiar with the material
  • have an opportunity to practice, and
  • can work at their own pace

13
  • Storehouses Sensory, Short-term
  • (STM), and Long-term (LTM)
  • If you tried to assimilate all the sensory inputs
    that flood your brain daily, you would suffer
    from information overload and be unable to focus.
  • Sensory memory is fleeting to avoid this problem

14
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15
  • Processing begins in short-term memory
  • STM
  • temporary storage (20-30 sec.) If content not
    rehearsed and processed further, it disappears.
  • Newer concept WORKING MEMORY
  • (WM) Intermediate Short-Term Storage
  • working memory current thoughts and processes.
    Whether from sensory storage or from long-term
    storage.
  • this information is consciously manipulated or
    reorganized.

16
  • working memory capacity varies across
    individuals, related to intelligence.
  • better, more complex processing
  • more attentional resources
  • more items that can be brought out from storage
    (retrieval)
  • juggling many balls at once
  • working memory contains whatever is in
    consciousness at a given moment

17
WORKING MEMORY
18
  • can normally hold only about 5-9 separate chunks
    of information at a time
  • possible to increase the amount of material held
    in working memory by grouping items into larger
    chunks
  • items will remain in working memory only about 30
    seconds unless you engage in rehearsal or some
    other purposeful effort

19
  • other processes become automatic, so as to free
    space in working memory the more automatization,
    the better working memory works, e.g.
    multiplication tables
  • simple STM no age differences
  • working memory age differences
  • working memory for spatial tasks declines more
    than for verbal tasks
  • some areas decline more than others

20
  • memories not lost in STM are assumed to be stored
    in LTM
  • so how come we cant remember so many things?
  • problems with retrieval bringing contents from
    LTM into working memory. Its there, but
    inaccessible.

21
  • Many reasons for retrieval failure
  • poorly encoded
  • interference of other material
  • conflicting emotions
  • lack of practice
  • Types of retrieval
  • recognition
  • recall
  • cued recall

22
  • LONG TERM MEMORY (LTM)
  • very large capacity (unlimited?) Everything that
    has been stored at any time in ones life.
  • multiple systems with different brain parts
    involved
  • each system involved in a different type of
    memory
  • difficult to study in the laboratory artificial
    situation unlike real life, DVs not
    representative of everyday life
  • some research with real life variables difficult
    to pick the right ones, more difficult to
    ascertain verosimilitude

23
  • LONG TERM MEMORY (LTM)
  • impossible to function without it at any age!
  • important for sense of self (predicament of
    amnesia sufferers).
  • Pure memory exercises in remembering lists,
    words, numbers, etc. (most of lab research)
  • Applied memory necessary for social
    interaction, enjoyment of life and daily
    functioning in any area

24
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25
  • TYPES OF LONG TERM MEMORY (LTM)
  • DECLARATIVE (you say something you remember)
  • NON-DECLARATIVE OR PROCEDURAL (you do something
    you remember) Some of this bypasses working
    memory.
  • EXPLICIT MEMORY conscious most declarative
  • IMPLICIT unintentional, unconscious most
    procedural

26
  • TYPES OF LONG TERM MEMORY (LTM)
  • DECLARATIVE EPISODIC AND
  • SEMANTIC
  • Episodic events, activities, personal
    experiences, discrete episodes affected by age,
    similar events merge as one
  • Semantic general knowledge, can be from
    accumulation of many episodic events (language
    part of this), little decline except for names

27
  • TYPES OF LONG TERM MEMORY (LTM)
  • PROCEDURAL MOTOR, PERCEPTUAL
  • AND CONDITIONED
  • Motor riding bike, playing instrument, automatic
  • Perceptual recall of features we were not
    focusing on
  • Conditioned classical conditioning

28
  • Examples of Differing Contents of Declarative and
    Nondeclarative Memory
  • Declarative Nondeclarative
  • Facts Habits
  • Language Motor skills
  • Social Customs Perceptual skills
  • Personal episodes Conditioned responses

29
  • Relationship Between Aging and Performance in
    Various Types of Memory
  • Sensory No change or small decline
  • Working
  • Organization Moderate to large decline
  • Elaboration Moderate to large decline

30
  • Long-term
  • Declarative
  • Episodic
  • Memory for experience and activities
  • moderate to large decline
  • Personal history
  • moderate to large decline
  • Semantic
  • World knowledge increases with age
  • Vocabulary increases with age

31
  • Nondeclarative
  • Skills
  • no change or small decline
  • Perceptual skills
  • no change or small decline
  • Motor learning
  • no change or small decline
  • Classical conditioning
  • no change or small decline

32
  • TYPES OF LONG TERM MEMORY (LTM)
  • PROSPECTIVE MEMORY
  • remembering to do something in the future
  • AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL MEMORY
  • events from ones life, hard to check out.
    Moderately traumatic events remembered more than
    extremely traumatic events (repression). Also
    important historical events (very talked about at
    the time) or any event with high emotional
    content.
  • Flashbulb memories very vivid, photo or
    video-like. More from 10-20 years of age than
    from later, for both young and old adults.
  • Very long term memories sometimes called remote
    or tertiary.

33
  • Age differences in episodic
  • Recall older adults worse off
  • omit more information
  • include more extraneous material
  • repeat previously recalled items
  • Cued recall some improvement
  • Recognition better, but still slightly worse
  • than young

34
  • Some variables that affect episodic memory
  • tests
  • attentional factors
  • encoding strategies (e.g. imagery, mnemonic aids
    such as method of loci)
  • level of arousal
  • time and speed, pacing
  • cautiousness
  • meaningfulness of material
  • motivation (intrinsic and extrinsic)

35
  • Some variables that affect episodic memory
  • tests (Contd)
  • incentives
  • health status
  • previous experience with test
  • how organized is the material
  • expectations
  • SES
  • interference proactive (old material affects
    new) and retroactive (new affects old), the first
    is stronger in older adults

36
  • Some variables that affect episodic memory
  • tests (Contd)
  • expertise
  • self-efficacy (confidence in self)
  • anxiety, stress and depression
  • exercise
  • nutrition (B vitamins)
  • alcohol and other drugs
  • medical drugs (interactions)
  • smoking

37
  • Priming an increase in ability to do a
    previously encountered task or to remember
    previously encountered material
  • Both declarative and nondeclarative memory can
    show effects of priming
  • An unconscious, automatic process
  • Speed is one indication that priming has occurred
  • To be effective, earlier and later stimuli should
    be as close to identical as possible
  • Seems to be equally efficient in younger and
    older adults
  • Normal older people whose episodic memory has
    weakened can benefit as much from priming as
    younger ones

38
  • Long-term Memory Inactive Storage
  • Not all contents within the long-term memory are
    equally accessible
  • Long-term memory is divided into rooms with
    different kinds of contents, and aging affects
    them differently

39
  • Overall, age is NOT a good predictor of
  • memory and learning capacity.
  • Importance of psychosocial and cultural factors
    if good expectations of elders, good memory

40
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41
  • HARDWARE OF MEMORY
  • There are several memory systems
  • These systems are anatomically different
  • They are involved in acquiring and storing
    different kinds of information
  • Currently studied using
  • MRI magnetic resonance imaging
  • fMRI functional MRI, taken during brain activity
  • PET positron emission tomography
  • EEG electroencephalograph still used

42
  • BIOPHYSIOLOGICAL UNDERPINNINGS
  • OF MEMORY
  • HIPPOCAMPUS and other structures in the medial
    temporal lobe. Old brain
  • FRONTAL LOBES executive function
  • Hippocampus crucial for memory formation except
    unconscious memory formation.
  • Hippocampus forms and activates cortical
    connections
  • Once memories are well stored, hippocampus not
    necessary for recall

43
THE HUMAN BRAIN
44
THE LIMBIC SYSTEM
45
  • With related structures in the cortex, it acts
    like a switchboard, controlling the ability to
    remember many kinds of declarative information
  • Is vital to the encoding functions of working
    memory
  • Its role is temporary
  • Is involved in the creation and immediate
    retrieval of new memories
  • Loses an estimated 20 of its nerve cells with
    advancing age

46
  • Particularly vulnerable to injury from changes in
    blood pressure that often occur during adulthood
    and to stress
  • If older adults suffer hippocampal deterioration,
    the alertness, concentration, and organizational
    abilities needed to process new information
    efficiently may decline
  • Recall of prior learning (independent of the
    hippocampus) may improve as a result of the
    growing complexity of neural connections in the
    cortex

47
  • A continuous stream of stress hormones appears to
    affect the hippocampus, reducing performance on
    tests of attention and memory
  • Encodes consciously perceived information
    rapidly, almost automatically, and without
    organization

48
  • Hippocampal deterioration can be due to
  • blood pressure problems
  • stress
  • oxygen deprivation
  • accumulation of lipofuscin
  • insufficient stimulation
  • decrease in neurotransmitters production
  • Affects
  • alertness
  • attentional factors
  • concentration
  • organization
  • Works in conjunction with the RAS (reticular
    activating
  • system)

49
  • Non-declarative memory (motor skills, habits) are
    not dependent on the hippocampus. Instead, on the
    cerebellum and neostriatum
  • Emotional responses amygdala. Independent from
    conscious memory systems

50
  • Frontal lobes front portions of the brains
    cerebral cortex, which form and direct strategies
    for encoding, storage, and retrieval of memories
  • Play a role in both normal and pathological
    memory changes
  • They coordinate, interpret, and elaborate
    information to provide proper instructions for
    encoding and retrieval

51
  • It is the operations of this strategic frontal
    system that you are aware of in searching your
    memory
  • They constantly evaluate the output of the
    hippocampal system
  • Evidence implicates the frontal lobes in
    selective declines in normal cognitive
    functioning
  • The ability to remember when and where you
    learned something seems to be related to the
    functioning of the frontal lobes

52
  • Learning that requires organization and
    elaboration is related to the frontal lobes
  • Damage does not usually hamper learning of
    information that can be encoded without creating
    new categories or associations
  • Loss of neurons in the frontal lobes (50) may be
    related to commonly observed deficits in working
    memory in older adults
  • Help focus attention and inhibit irrelevant
    responses

53
  • Structures Controlling
  • Unconscious Memory
  • Perceptual and motor skills seem to depend on the
    neostriatum.
  • Neostriatum a subcortical structure above the
    hippocampus, which controls motor activity

54
  • Muscular conditioning or changes in heart rate
    due to conditioned fear appears to be linked to
    the cerebellum.
  • Cerebellum the brains coordinating center for
    muscular activity, which lies below the cortex
    near the back of the head.

55
  • Tricks memory can play
  • Source memory
  • Where did I hear this? who told me? Older adults
    less accurate.
  • False memory
  • Remembering things that didnt happen. Older
    adults higher incidence. Con artists take
    advantage.
  • Due to not trusting ones memory?
  • Not remembering information that conflicts with
    previously held beliefs. More pronounced in older
    adults.

56
  • Importance of memory self-efficacy
  • Belief in ones memory capacity. Influences
    actual performance in memory tasks and determines
    whether older adult retreats from new
    situations/tasks or not.
  • Memory and Mental Health
  • Stress
  • Depression
  • Dementia

memory deficits
57
  • Memory and Drugs
  • Alcohol
  • Tranquilizers and sedatives
  • Antipsychotic drugs
  • Memory and Nutrition
  • Vitamin B complex very important for CNS
    (central nervous system)
  • Memory and Physical Exercise
  • More oxygen to brain
  • More endorphins mood enhancer, helps cognitive
    function, increased confidence

memory deficits
58
  • Long-term Memory Inactive Storage
  • Not all contents within the long-term memory are
    equally accessible
  • Long-term memory is divided into rooms with
    different kinds of contents, and aging affects
    them differently

59
  • Metamemory The View From Within
  • Metamemory beliefs or knowledge about how memory
    works
  • Related to metamemory mnemonics

60
  • Mnemonics Making the Most of Changing Memory
  • Mnemonics strategies to enhance encoding,
    storage, and recall
  • May help adults make the most of changing memory
  • E-I-E-I-O model model for classifying mnemonic
    techniques according to type of processing
    (explicit or implicit) and initial site of
    storage (external or internal)
  • Allows us to be precise about which storage sites
    and which memory processes are being tapped

61
  • Explicit External Aids
  • Devices outside the person that assist with
    conscious learning or retrieval of facts
  • Notes, lists, calendars
  • Written reminders are the most popular (for all
    ages)
  • Particularly helpful to older adults to
    supplement limited or declining attention and
    storage space in working memory
  • Sensory or object cues can compensate for the
    blurring of episodic memory

62
  • Explicit Internal Aids
  • Mental imaging
  • A more common use of visual images is in
    remembering names
  • Older adults are less likely than younger adults
    to use such imaging strategies spontaneously
  • When used by older adults, images tend to be
    relevant to their experience rather than made-up

63
  • Method of loci a series of places (loci) are
    associated with items to be remembered and then
    mentally revisited during recall
  • Works for prospective actions
  • Rehearsal, organization and elaboration are
    explicit internal aids
  • Takes conscious effort on the part of working
    memory
  • Are more useful to younger adults than to older
    ones
  • Older trainees show less improvement, especially
    for different tasks
  • Without monitoring and support, older adults tend
    to stop using the techniques (effort may be too
    great)

64
  • Implicit External Aids
  • Sensory cues offer promise for improving implicit
    memory in older adults (especially those with
    memory impairments) e.g. labelling cupboards

65
  • Implicit Internal Aids
  • Other memories can be effective for older adults
    (especially those with memory impairment whose
    unconscious memory functioning is likely to be
    relatively intact) e.g. ironing, showing by doing
  • Spaced retrieval involves priming or classical
    conditioning in which people are trained to
    recall information for an increasingly long time
  • Has proved effective with Alzheimers patients

66
  • Forgetting and its Surprising Benefits
  • Difference between human beings and computers is
    the ability to forget
  • Memory is a dynamic, ever changing synthesis of
    remembering and forgetting
  • Forgetting clears the way for freshness,
    creativity, and innovation
  • Forgetting the minds overflow valve
  • A mind that couldnt forget would contain an
    indiscriminate jumble of the important and
    unimportant, the relevant and irrelevant
  • Difficulty generalizing (a person who couldnt
    forget details)

67
  • Forgetting and its Surprising Benefits (Cont.)
  • Older people may be more likely to forget in
    everyday life
  • Older people may shift to a strategy of selective
    forgetting so they can use their mental energy
    and attention more efficiently for the tasks that
    matter at their time of life
  • From a lifespan perspective, forgetting may be
    the price for a developmental change that enables
    wisdom to emerge

68
  • Summing up Memory and Age
  • Information-processing theory and research
    suggest that memory is a highly complex set of
    processes and storage systems
  • Aging does negatively affect the capacity of
    working memory to process certain kinds of
    declarative information and to access it in
    long-term memory
  • Older adults may have less attentional resources
    to focus on manipulating information and may not
    use the most effective strategies for encoding it

69
  • Summing up Memory and Age (Cont.)
  • After years of living, recollection of specific
    episodes begins to fade and events tend to run
    together in memory
  • The ability to call on general knowledge
    increases (the ability to express it verbally may
    not)
  • Unconscious remembering, usually of skills or
    procedures, generally holds up well with age

70
  • The Art of Aging
  • The Best Memory Aid
  • A Healthy Lifestyle
  • Cigarette smoking has negative effects on complex
    problem solving that makes high demands on
    working memory and long-term memory
  • Getting enough sleep and eating the right foods
    can make a positive difference in how well memory
    works across the adult lifespan

71
  • REM sleep is an important time for consolidation
    of new learning
  • Aspartame, and artificial sweeteners, contains
    phenylalanine, the amino acid involved in
    phenylketonuria (PKU), an enzyme disorder than
    can cause developmental disabilities
  • An excess of diet soda can impair mental
    performance, especially when accompanied by other
    sweets
  • Zinc is crucial to nerve cells in the cortex that
    control memory and high-level thinking but
  • Too much zinc can be toxic and may be associated
    with Picks disease

72
  • The Multicultural Context
  • Memory and Culture
  • People tend to remember what they are familiar
    with and interested in
  • Peoples knowledge base, which influences what
    they remember, varies from culture to culture
  • Adults tend to excel in the skills which their
    culture encourages
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