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Memory 2

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Title: Memory 2


1
Memory 2
2
The Physiological Basis of Memory
  • The cellular basis of memory is a long-lasting
    change in the efficacy of the synapse. This was
    shown by Eric Kandel, using a simple experimental
    model, the sea slug Aplysia. It has a protective
    reflex that is modified during learning.
  • During learning the synapse to the left in the
    drawing becomes activated. This leads to an
    increased synthesis of cAMP and protein kinases
    in the target cell (center). The cell nucleus
    (above) will be affected by the protein kinase.
    The final result will be an increased synthesis
    of new proteins and a growth of the main synapse.
    In this way the synapse will become more
    efficient and be able to release more transmitter

3
The Physiological Basis of Memory
  • Learning takes place in the synapse between
    sensory and motor nerve cells.
  • A schematic wiring diagram is shown to the right.
    An increased release of transmitter each time the
    sensory neuron is activated leads to a stronger
    muscle activation.
  • The learning process is mediated via
    phosphorylation, initially in the synapse
    resulting in short-term memory and later via
    changes in gene activation.
  • This results in growth of the synapse and a
    long-lasting change of function. Therefore,
    synapses form the building blocks of memory.

4
Long Term Memory
  • Performance on even the most basic task requires
    memory for events or information that occurred in
    the past.
  • Long term memory is a concept that represents
    that vast amount of knowledge we have stored
    about the world.
  • This includes procedural knowledge, such as how
    to ride a bicycle, general or semantic knowledge
    about how things occur (e.g. rain), and episodic
    knowledge about specific events that have
    happened to us directly (graduation).
  • The capacity of long term memory is assumed to be
    huge to store all of the necessary knowledge.
  • Many researchers believe that knowledge in LTM is
    permanent, although this has been questioned.

5
Evidence for Permanence Decay vs retrieval
Failure
  • Evidence for the presence of memory that we may
    not currently be able to access comes from
    studies of implicit tests with normal populations
    and with amnesiacs.
  • An implicit test of memory is one in which memory
    is tested for an event without the awareness of
    the test subject. This is contrasted with
    explicit tests of memory in which the subject is
    actively attempting to recall an event.
  • Examples of explicit tests include recognition
    recall, examples of implicit tests include stem
    completion exemplar generation. Implicit tests
    are based on models of priming.
  • Priming is a term that refers to the phenomenon,
    that once you have been exposed to a stimulus
    once you will respond to the same stimulus faster
    if you are exposed to it again.
  • Implicit tests can clearly demonstrate that you
    have access to previous events that you may not
    consciously be able to recall. This implies that
    much of what we fail to access is due to
    retrieval failure.

6
Graf Schacter, 1985
  • This famous study with Amnesiac patients
    demonstrated that implicit tests can tap into
    memory processes that the patient is unable to
    retrieve

7
Levels of Processing Theory
  • Although research has shown that attention is
    critical for the encoding of memories, not all
    attention is the same.
  • How people attend to a stimulus and what they
    focus on is critical in determining what will be
    remembered.
  • One theory that addresses this concept is Craik
    Lockharts (1972) theory on Levels of Processing.
  • The Levels of processing theory argues that the
    deeper one encodes information by focusing on
    different stimulus characteristics, the stronger
    the memory code and the more resistant it will be
    to forgetting.

8
Levels of Processing theory
  • In dealing with verbal information the levels of
    processing theory argues that we encode
    information at three different levels,
    STRUCTURAL, phonemic, and semantic with
    corresponding deeper levels of processing.
  • However, studies have also shown that
    non-semantic information can be retained as long
    as semantic information (Stein, 1978). If this is
    the case then it casts doubt on the depth of
    processing hypothesis.

9
Elaboration Hypothesis Craik Tulving, 1975
  • The deeper level of encoding occurs because of
    the increasingly elaborate nature of the
    processing.
  • Elaboration by definition is linking a stimulus
    to other levels of information at the time of
    encoding.

10
More information about Elaboration
  • Congruity effect-The congruity effect occurs when
    semantic orienting questions that are true,
    produce better recall, than semantic orienting
    questions that are false.
  • E.g. The bird flew into the tree-Congruent
  • The dog flew into the tree-Incongruent
  • The Congruent condition will produce better
    retention for the sentence.

11
Organization
  • Another important encoding process is
    organization.
  • Organization is the process of grouping discrete
    items into larger units based on relationships
    among the items
  • Whereas elaboration refers to the relationship
    among material to be remembered and material that
    will not be remembered, organization refers to
    relationships among the material to be remembered
    (e.g. duck, robin, sparrow are all forms of
    birds).
  • Elaboration seems to emphasize distinctiveness,
    organization emphasizes similarities
  • This effect occurs with both oblivious
    information but also with subjective information
    (e.g. information that is not obliviously
    related)
  • Much of this seems to be based on context, that
    is, the situation the information is presented
    in.
  • Organization also occurs for perceptual
    information

12
Encoding Parameters
  • Information that is personally relevant, that is,
    has meaning for you will be remembered better
    than information that is non-specific to you.
  • Information that is generated individually by a
    subject will be remembered better than
    information that is just presented.
  • Information will be recalled better when you
    attempt to recall it in the same place that you
    encoded it (encoding specificity effect).
  • Flashbulb memories (e.g. memories associated with
    strong emotion that seem to persist vividly over
    time) are not actually impervious to change or
    forgetting over time, they are however highly
    resistant to change decay because of the strong
    nature of encoding that occurs during a traumatic
    event (e.g. where you were on 9/11).

13
Visual Imagery Elaboration
  • Do we store actual images of the world (e.g.
    analog images) or do we store representations
  • There is good evidence to suggest that we do
    store visual codes with specific representations
    of the world.
  • When we create a visual code in order to
    elaborate on information (e.g. picturing an image
    of a rabbit when we are asked to remember the
    item rabbit retention is superior.
  • This effect led to the proposal of dual code
    theory
  • Again this is probably due to linking a stimulus
    to other levels of information at the time of
    encoding.
  • The additional stimulus cues enhance memory
    Retrieval!

14
Dual Code Theory
  • This Study by Paivio, Smythe, and Yuille (1968)
    illustrates the benefits of elaboration at the
    time of encoding. Adding examples of visual
    imagery to words increases retention of items.
  • This probably occurs because it provides a dual
    memory code.
  • Dual-Coding Theory states that memory is
    enhanced by forming semantic and visual codes at
    encoding since either can lead to recall

15
Retrieval Processes
  • Recovering Information from Long Term Memory

16
Retrieval from LTM
  • For memory to be of use to us we must be able to
    retrieve it.
  • In order to retrieve information we must be able
    to use a cue, that is some type of information
    must be available to delineate the specific event
    from all others stored in LTM.
  • The retrieval process in dependent on cues
  • Two major theories of cue effectiveness have been
    proposed, cue associative strength of the cue,
    and encoding specificity hypothesis

17
Associative Strength Theory of Cue Effectiveness
  • Associative strength theory proposes that if a
    cue occurs frequently, it will be effective in
    retrieving a memory.
  • Strongly associated cues produce better memory
    than do weakly associated cues (this information
    is based on studies of free association).
  • Bird-Feathers Cat-Hair
  • Bird-hair
  • Associative strength theories work on the
    assumption that the memory structure consists of
    all items being interrelated in memory
  • Retrieval begins with activation of the
    representation of the cue, and activation is the
    process of transferring information from LTM to
    STM.
  • Spreading activation occurs when the cue that is
    activated also activates related concepts

18
Connectionist Models of Memory
  • Not all information belongs to the same
    categories, but often times information is
    related in meaning to other pieces of
    information.
  • A semantic network is a model of how items are
    represented in long term memory
  • Theories of Parallel Distributed Processing
    propose that cognitive processes depend on
    patterns of activation in highly related and
    interconnected computational networks that
    represent neural networks

19
Encoding Specificity Hypothesis of Cue
Effectiveness
  • Every events that ever occurs represents a unique
    combination of characteristics in terms of the
    stimulus cues that are present.
  • Therefore, effective retrieval cues for memory
    are those that were specifically present at the
    time of encoding, this concept is referred to as
    encoding specificity
  • This means that you will be able to retrieve
    information more effectively if you are in the
    same situation in which you encoded it, or if the
    original stimulus cues present at the time of
    encoding are present (e.g. taking a test in the
    same room in which you studied for it).
  • Encoding specificity does not apply to general
    semantic knowledge that occurs frequently, but to
    specific events.
  • It seems organization of information at encoding
    produces the general information being described
    in the retrieval process, but distinctive
    information is necessary to retrieve specific
    events.

20
General Knowledge Specific Memory
  • The difference between encoding specificity and
    cue distinctiveness demonstrates that retrieval
    of information is different depending on the
    situation(e.g. specific information or general
    knowledge)
  • This suggests the possibility of different and
    distinct LTM systems.
  • Tulving (1985) has suggested a useful
    classification system
  • Procedural memory-refers to memory processes that
    are required to retrieve information underlying
    skilled performance (e.g. bicycling or walking).
    This type of information retrieval is automatic,
    and is characterized by absence of thought
  • Semantic Memory-this type of knowledge is general
    information about the world, it is context
    independent, and does not refer to a specific
    event. Accompanied by a feeling of Knowing
  • Episodic Memory-is the system that represents
    specific events, the cues to retrieve them must
    have been part of the original episode, it is
    very context dependant, and is accompanied by a
    conscious feeling of remembering.

21
Evidence for Multiple LTM Systems
  • Different characteristics seem to represent the
    different systems (associative strength vs.
    encoding specificity).
  • Studies of Amnesiacs (retrograde amnesia) often
    demonstrate selective impairment of memory
  • That is they demonstrate impaired episodic
    knowledge but intact semantic knowledge (e.g.
    assessed performance on indirect tasks like
    solving word puzzles is spared but performance on
    direct tests like recognition is impaired).
  • PET and SPECT studies have demonstrated that
    performance on incidental encoding and retrieval
    tasks seems to activate the left prefrontal
    cortex, while episodic retrieval seems to
    activate the right pre-frontal cortex.
  • Performance memory or procedural memory also
    seems to be impaired in some types of
    neurological patients (e.g. Parkinson's and
    Huntington's patients) while semantic and
    episodic retrieval seems to be spared.
  • Again this is supported by PET studies showing
    different areas of activation in the brain during
    procedural tasks.

22
Direct or Indirect retrieval?
Memory Item
Correct vs. Incorrect
Recall
Cue
Memory
Memory Item
Recall
Use Memory Cue
  • A single process view suggests that we use an
    encoded cue to directly retrieve a memory item,
    encoding specificity supports this view as do
    studies using recognition test procedures.
  • The generation-recognition view is an alternative
    view of memory retrieval that suggests that
    recall of an item requires that we retrieve an
    item, and then decide if it is correct or
    incorrect prior to recall. Studies using recall
    test procedures support this view.
  • An interesting note is that high frequency words
    are recalled better, but low frequency words are
    recognized better, this makes sense if you
    believe that recall requires generation of a word
    while recognition only requires discrimination of
    a word (thus support for the generation
    hypothesis)

23
Implicit vs. Explicit Memory Tests
  • Explicit memory tests (or direct tests) include
    the two types of processes mentioned in the
    previous slide, recognition recall.
  • They are considered direct tests because they
    specifically direct the test subject to some
    piece of information to be retrieved.
  • Implicit memory tests (or indirect tests) include
    tests like completion of a word fragment, or the
    generation of a category exemplar (see below)
  • HOR_ _ or MOU _ _ Cat as the example of the
    category Animal
  • Indirect tests attempt to demonstrate that some
    past experience like exposure to a certain word
    will influence the production of a stem or
    category.
  • Indirect tests do not specifically direct you to
    a previous experience, they attempt to show an
    influence of Priming
  • indirect tests and direct tests can be
    dissociated which has again provided evidence of
    different memory systems and different retrieval
    processes

24
Dissociations on Explicit vs. Implicit Tests
  • Dissociations by definition mean that a variable
    has a different effect on performance depending
    on the type of test used to measure it (like
    amnesia).
  • Numerous other factors that produce dissociation
    also have been studied, (for example semantic
    orienting tasks and read vs. generate tasks
    produce large effects on direct tests but little
    effects on indirect tests).

25
Dissociations on Explicit vs. Implicit Tests
  • In general, The Memory Systems Explanation (e.g.
    Tulvings proposal of Episodic, semantic,
    Procedural memory) assumes that direct tests draw
    on Episodic Memory, and indirect tests draw on
    Semantic Memory.
  • Since the different systems operate according to
    different principals it is not surprising that a
    variable can have very different effects on the
    different tests.
  • Direct tests are also subject to encoding
    specificity, that is Indirect tests are governed
    by associative strength, since they operate from
    semantic memory.

26
A Different way to think about implicit memory
tests Conceptually Driven Vs. Perceptually
Driven Tests
  • Perhaps a better way to think about memory tests
    has been proposed by the Transfer Appropriate
    Processing Theory.
  • A memory test the re-engages the same type of
    processing used at encoding will work better than
    one that types to tap the opposite type of
    processing
  • Reading a word at study is thought to rely on the
    physical features, while generating a word is
    thought to rely on its semantic features.
  • Therefore a memory test like stem completion (a
    perceptual test) would work better on a person
    who read a work compared to a person who
    generated a word

27
Dividing Attention at Study an interesting way
to determine what types of processing is at work
  • If you divide a subjects attention at study
    between two tasks, you are going to interfere
    with semantic (associative processing), but this
    should not interfere with automatic perceptual
    processing.

28
Retrieval Failure Another way of Examining
Memory Processes
  • Decay theory-Suggests that memory weakens or is
    lost over time. However studies of implicit
    memory, and some physiological studies have cast
    doubt on the decay theory.
  • Interference Theory-information is unavailable at
    recall because competing information cause
    retrieval failure

29
The Search for The Physiological Basis of Memory
  • The slide above shows Wilder Penefields attempt
    to localize memory by stimulating areas of an
    awake patients cortex during a surgical
    procedure for epilepsy.
  • Penefields patients reported vivid memories in
    response to stimulation by an electrical probe.
    Penefield was only able to obtain these results
    when he stimulated areas of the temporal lobe so
    he concluded that was the area of storage for
    memories.
  • Later researchers have been critical of
    Penefields methods and at this time it does not
    appear that memory is localized to the temporal
    lobe

30
Interference
  • Interference can come in two forms, retroactive,
    and proactive and may be responsible for
    retrieval failure

31
Physiological Evidence for Interference Theory
Types of Amnesia
  • There are two major groups of amnesiacs
    classified on the basis of which type of memory
    is impaired. Memory before the accident, or
    memory after the accident

32
6 Major systems in memory
  • Perceptual (e.g. sensory register)
  • STM
  • LTM
  • -Procedural
  • -Episodic
  • -Semantic
  • Priming is a system that resembles perceptual
    memory but is not, resembles semantic memory but
    is not. Priming is a form of implicit memory, in
    that it occurs automatically and is non-conscious

E
STM
S
P
P
Priming
33
Cognition, Emotion, Memory
34
Emotion
  • Emotion-is usually referred to as positive or
    negative feelings that are produced by a
    particular situation.
  • Emotions are patterns of physiological responses
    and species typical behaviors linked together, In
    humans these responses are accompanied by
    feelings.
  • Most of us use the term emotion to refer to
    feelings, and not the behaviors that accompany
    the feelings.
  • However, it is the behaviors, and not the
    feelings, that have consequences for our survival
    and reproduction.
  • Thus the argument could be made that the useful
    purposes served by emotional behavior, are what
    guided the evolution of the brain, the feelings
    that accompany these behaviors came later in the
    evolutionary game

35
Classic theories of Emotion
  • Stanley Schacter was an influential psychologist
    who developed an important theory of Cognition,
    emotion, Memory

36
Schacter Singer
37
The Physiology of Emotion
  • There are three components to an emotion
    response, 1) a behavioral component, 2) an
    autonomic component, and 3) a hormonal component
  • For example when a dog defends its territory
    against another dog, it first postures, growls,
    and shows its teeth. If the intruder does not
    leave, the dog attacks and the sympathetic branch
    of the nervous system increases activity and the
    parasympathetic branch reduces activity allowing
    for an increase in blood flow and respiration.
    Finally hormonal responses reinforce the
    autonomic responses (e.g. the adrenal medulla
    secretes epinephrine and norepinephrine which
    further increase blood flow stimulate the
    production of glucose).
  • The overt behaviors, the autonomic responses, and
    the hormonal responses are all controlled by
    separate neural systems, however the integration
    of these responses appears to be controlled by
    the amygdala.

38
The Physiology of Emotion
  • The amygdala is located in the temporal lobe, and
    seems to plays a special role in physiological
    arousal and behavioral reactions to objects
    situations that have special biological
    significance (e.g. those that warn of pain or
    signify the presence of food, water, or other
    important biological stimuli).
  • The amygdala has also been associated with memory
    for emotional events.
  • The central nucleus of the amygdala receives all
    forms of sensory information, relayed down from
    the the primary sensory cortex and association
    cortex, and up from the thalamus via the
    basolateral group.
  • The area also projects to the hippocampus.
  • Damage to the amygdala leads to reduces or
    abolishes a wide range of emotional responses

39
The Physiology of Emotion
  • The orbitofrontal cortex is located just at the
    base of the frontal lobes, just above the eye
    orbits.
  • This area receives indirect input from the
    amygdala and direct input from the thalamus and
    and temporal cortex.
  • It has been shown to play an important role in
    the control of emotional behavior, damage to this
    area reduces peoples inhibitions and self concern
    so that they become less sensitive to the
    consequences of their actions.
  • Although they remain responsive to pain, the pain
    no longer produces an emotional reaction.
  • This finding has lead to the use of the
    pre-frontal lobotomy as a tool for controlling
    emotional reactivity

40
Phineas Gage An early neuropsychological Case
Study in Cognition Emotion
  • The famous case of Phineas Gage, and the tramatic
    destruction of the orbitofrontal cortex.

41
Emotion, Cognition Memory
  • Research on the relationship between emotional
    states and cognitive processes has shown a
    significant increase in the last 25 years
  • On reason for the recent interest in emotions, is
    that it has become apparent that emotion (or
    affective) states, can very much influence
    cognitive processes.
  • An additional reason for the increase in studies
    examining emotion cognition is that research
    methods for inducing temporary emotional states
    (e.g. hypnosis or verbal induction) have been
    introduced, which allows emotion as a variable to
    be introduced.
  • Finally the last 25 years has seen an increase in
    studies assessing normal moods, rather than just
    examining disordered moods.
  • Due to some of the major research finding on mood
    influenced memory, many cognitive psychologists
    have now become convinced that any model of
    memory cognition must account for the influence
    of affective states, such as stress anxiety,
    depression, and arousal.

42
Mood Congruent Memory
  • Mood congruence refers to the finding that people
    are more likely to remember information that is
    congruent with the mood state they were in when
    they learned the material (Bower Monteiro,
    1981).
  • Mood Congruent States-A mood congruent effect
    occurs when material learned in a particular mood
    is recalled when a person is tested under the
    same state.
  • This effect probably occurs because the emotion
    gives additional recall cues to guide the gist or
    theme of the information.

43
Mood effects on Encoding
  • Encoding seems to be best when an individual is
    in a neutral mood.
  • Subjects in sad moods also perform poorer on
    elaboration tests.
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