Forgetting in LTM - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Forgetting in LTM

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Forgetting in LTM Availability vs accessibility Interference Suggests that information forgotten from LTM has disappeared completely Cue dependent forgetting – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Forgetting in LTM


1
Forgetting in LTM
  • Availability vs accessibility
  • Interference
  • Suggests that information forgotten from LTM has
    disappeared completely
  • Cue dependent forgetting
  • Suggests that forgotten information is still
    stored, but is (temporarily) inaccessible

www.psychlotron.org.uk
2
Interference
  • Forgetting occurs when information to be stored
    is similar to information already in LTM
  • Retroactive - new info overwrites previously
    stored info
  • Proactive - previously stored info prevents new
    info from being stored properly
  • Predicts that forgetting will increase with
    similarity of information

www.psychlotron.org.uk
3
Interference
  • McGeoch MacDonald (1931)
  • PPs had to learn lists of adjectives, recall
    after a delay. Three conditions
  • Did nothing between learning recall
  • Learned additional unrelated material
  • Learned additional adjectives
  • Most forgetting in group 3
  • Supports prediction that forgetting is a function
    of similarity

www.psychlotron.org.uk
4
Interference
  • Tulving (1966)
  • PPs asked to free recall word lists they had
    previously learned
  • Recall tested on several different occasions
  • Generally, PPs recalled about 50 of the words,
    but not always the same 50
  • Suggests that words had not disappeared but had
    actually been inaccessible
  • This is contrary to what interference theory
    suggests

www.psychlotron.org.uk
5
Interference
  • Clearly it is possible to confuse similar
    information
  • Some experiments support interference theory, but
    they are very artificial
  • Information that has been forgotten often becomes
    recoverable later
  • Unlikely that interference accounts for most of
    the forgetting we do

www.psychlotron.org.uk
6
Cue Dependent Forgetting
  • Forgetting occurs when information becomes
    inaccessible
  • We lack the appropriate retrieval cues that will
    allow us to locate it in LTM
  • Retrieval cues can be external (context) or
    internal (state)
  • Predicts that remembering will be better when
    state context are the same as at the time of
    learning

www.psychlotron.org.uk
7
Cue Dependent Forgetting
  • Smith (1970) tested recall of a word list in the
    original learning context or a different room
  • Same room 18/80 words
  • Different room 12/80 words
  • PPs who imagined themselves back in original room
    recalled avg. 17/80
  • Strong evidence for role of context cues in
    retrieval

www.psychlotron.org.uk
8
Cue Dependent Forgetting
  • Fair amount of support for role of state cues in
    forgetting/remembering e.g
  • Goodwin et al (1969) heavy drinkers often
    forgot where they had put things when sober, but
    remembered once they had drunk sufficient alcohol
  • Eich (1980) similar findings with heavy marijuana
    users

www.psychlotron.org.uk
9
Cue Dependent Forgetting
  • Much research support for basic propositions.
  • Retrieval seems to be most likely when conditions
    match those of initial learning
  • Does not apply equally to all types of info
  • E.g. procedural memories (skills) seem stable,
    resistant to forgetting and not reliant on
    retrival cues

www.psychlotron.org.uk
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