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Memory and Thought

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Title: Memory and Thought


1
Memory and Thought
  • Unit 6

2
Exploring Psychology
  • John Kingsley came to our attention in a shocking
    news story about an 83-year-old Alzheimers
    patient who was found unattended in his
    wheelchair at a dog race track outside of
    Spokane, Washington. Attached to his chair a
    note misidentifying him. John did not know who
    he was or how he got to the races. He could not
    help authorities find his family or his previous
    caregivers. John Kingsley, like many other
    patients during advanced stages of Alzheimers
    disease, is alive, but without life. Without a
    memory of his past, or the ability to remember
    anything new, Johns life is nothing but the
    existing moment.

-from Psychology Science, Behavior, and Life by
R.H. Ettinger, Robert L. Crooks, and Jean Stein,
1994.
3
The
  • Which would be more frightening to you not
    being able to remember the past or not being able
    to learn anything new? Why?

4
Ever Had a Day Like This???
  •  You get to school and realize you forgot your
    lunch at home. You take a test and you can't
    remember half the answers. You see the new kid
    who just joined your class, and you can't
    remember his name. Some days, it seems like your
    brain is taking a holiday--you can't remember
    anything!

5
Memory
  • The storage and retrieval of what has been
    learned or experienced.
  • Who were your friends in eighth grade?
  • Who sings your favorite song?

6
The Process of Memory
  • Encoding
  • The transforming of information so the nervous
    system can process it.
  • Acoustic
  • Visual
  • Semantic
  • Storage
  • The process by which information is maintained
    over a period of time.
  • Retrieval
  • The process of obtaining information that has
    been stored in memory.

7
What do you see?
You will have twenty seconds to look at the
picture.
How many items can you name?
8
What do you hear?
9
Our Memory Is Like A Filing Cabinet
10
Three Stages of Memory
  • Sensory
  • Very brief memory storage immediately following
    initial stimulation of a receptor.
  • Short-term
  • Memory that is limited in capacity to about seven
    items and in duration by the subjects active
    rehearsal.
  • Long-term
  • Memory that is stored over extended periods of
    time.

11
Sensory Memory
  • Sight and hearing.
  • Iconic visual playback
  • Echoic auditory playback
  • Hold memory for fractions of a second.
  • If it is not important it will be lost.
  • Serves three functions
  • Prevents you from being overwhelmed.
  • Gives you some decision time.
  • Allows for continuity and stability

12
Short-Term Memory
  • A few things (no more than seven) for a short
    period.
  • Maintenance rehearsal
  • Keeping information for a short period by
    repeating it to your self. (example phone
    number).
  • Chunking
  • The process of grouping items to make them easier
    to remember.
  • Kept in short term memory for less than 20
    seconds. If it is important it will be
    transferred to long-term memory. If not, it will
    be lost.

13
Find the Real Penny

 
14
Chunking
  • MTVCIACCCFBIMIALOLBRBONFRWLTBAFYINISNCISTCSUASSCCP
    WBHS

15
milk
cheese
butter
eggs
flour
apples
grapes
shampoo
bread
ground beef
cereal
catsup
green beans
jelly
16
(cont.)
  • Primacy-recency
  • Refers to the fact that we are better able to
    recall information presented at the beginning and
    end of a list
  • Primacy the first few on the list because of
    rehearsal time
  • Recency the last few on the list because they
    are still accessible for short-term memory.
  • Working memory (aka short-term)
  • Short-term memory information from long-term
    that has been recalled for current information.

17
Long-Term Memory
  • Types
  • Semantic
  • Knowledge of language, including its rules,
    words, and meaning.
  • Recalling the first five presidents.
  • Episodic
  • Memory of ones life, including time of
    occurrence.
  • Recalling where you went on your 13th birthday.
  • Declarative
  • Memory of knowledge that can be called forth
    consciously as needed.
  • Suddenly thinking of a friends name without
    knowing why.
  • Procedural
  • Memory of learned skills that does not require
    conscious recollection (swimming, riding a bike,
    fear of bugs).

18
Three Systems of Memory
Maintenance Rehearsal
Sensory Memory
STM (Working)
LTM
Sensory Input
Unattended information is quickly lost
Unrehearsed information is quickly lost
Some information may be lost over time
19
Stages of Memory
Sensory Memory Short-term Memory Long-term Memory
Capacity Virtually everything you see or hear at one instant About 7 items in healthy adults Vast, uncountable
Duration Fraction of a second Less than 20 seconds if not rehearsed. Perhaps a lifetime.
Example You see something for an instant, and then someone asks you to recall one detail You look up a telephone number and remember it long enough to dial it You remember the house where you lived when you were 7 years old
20
Retrieving Information
21
Exploring Psychology
  • What a Memory!
  • Rajan Mahadevan stood before the packed house of
    the International Congress on Yoga and
    Meditation. He recieted, from memory, the first
    30,000 digits of pi, which is often rounded off
    to two decimal points, of 3.1Rajan Mahadevan
    stood before the packed house of the
    International Congress on Yoga and Meditation.
    He recieted, from memory, the first 30,000 digits
    of pi, which is often rounded off to two decimal
    points, of 3.14. He did not err until the
    31,812th digit. This feat took 3 hours and 44
    minutes and earned him a place in the Guinness
    Book of World Records
  • Rajan can repeat a string of 60 numbers after a
    single hearing, while most of us can repeat and
    average of about seven random numbers. Rajan is
    one of only a half-dozen people in the world know
    to have such gargantuan memory powers.
  • Despite Rajans unbelievable ability to
    memorize numbers, he seems to be worse than
    average at recalling faces, and he constantly
    forgets where he put his keys.

-adapted from Introduction to Psychology by Rod
Plotnki, 1996
22
The Question
  • What are your best functions of memory.
  • How good are you at names?
  • How good are you at faces?

23
Ever Had Days Like This???
24
The Key to Memory
Organization
25
(No Transcript)
26
Ways to Retrieve
  • Recognition
  • Can you name the names of all your teachers since
    first grade?
  • You may not remember the names of your teachers
    but chances are you would remember it if you
    heard it.
  • Memory retrieval in which a person identifies an
    object, idea, or situation as one he or she has
    or has not experienced before.

27
George Clooney
28
Nancy Pelosi
29
Anna Nicole Smith
30
James Spann
31
Katie Couric
32
Bugs Bunny
33
Captain Kangaroo
34
  • Recall
  • Memory retrieval in which a person reconstructs
    previously learned material.
  • Remembering is an active process guided by our
    experience, knowledge, and cues we receive from
    the environment.

What was I wearing yesterday?
35
Recite the Preamble to the Constitution
  • We the People of the United States, in Order to
    form a more perfect Union, establish Justice,
    insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the
    common defence, promote the general Welfare, and
    secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and
    our Posterity, do ordain and establish this
    Constitution for the United States of America.

36
Types of Recall
  • Reconstructive Processes
  • The alteration of a recalled memory that may be
    simplified, enriched, or distorted, depending on
    an individuals experiences, attitudes, or
    inferences.
  • Confabulation
  • The act of filling in memory gaps.
  • Schemas
  • Conceptual frameworks a person uses to make sense
    of the word.
  • What does the word flipped mean to you?
  • Eidetic Memory
  • The ability to remember with great accuracy
    visual information on the basis of short-term
    exposure.
  • Children tend to exhibit this recall more so than
    adults.

37
  • Both recognition and recall are declarative
    memory.
  • Define it
  • Memory of knowledge that can be called forth
    consciously as needed.

38
I Cant Believe I Forgot!!!
39
Forgetting is Normal
  • Its called decay.
  • Interference
  • Blockage of a memory by previous or subsequent
    memories.
  • Proactive
  • An earlier memory blocks you from remembering
    related new information.
  • Youve moved to a new home and have trouble
    remembering your new phone number and address
    because you know your other one.
  • Retroactive
  • A later memory or new information blocks you from
    remembering information learned earlier.
  • Youve moved to a new home and have learned your
    new address and phone number. Now you have
    trouble recalling your old address and phone
    number.

40
A Way to Remember
  • Mnemonic devices
  • Techniques for using associations to memorize and
    retrieve information.
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