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Just a few Reminders

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Just a few Reminders Remainder of vocabulary are due tomorrow 1/12 (echoic memory to source amnesia)- 18 items. Index cards should be turned in and Quiz will be given. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Just a few Reminders


1
Just a few Reminders
  1. Remainder of vocabulary are due tomorrow 1/12
    (echoic memory to source amnesia)- 18 items.
  2. Index cards should be turned in and Quiz will be
    given.
  3. We will review Tuesday after quiz. All reading of
    Ch 8 should be complete by Tuesday at latest.
  4. Chapter Test will be Wed/Thurs block -75
    Questions. (

2
Memory Construction
3
First a little activity
  • You have a paper with some T/F questions.
  • Please flip it over to the blank side.
  • We are going to demonstrate the superiority of
    recognition over recall memory.
  • Listen to the following list. (dont write
    anything down)

4
  • Write down as many as they you recall on a the
    blank sheet of paper . (flip it over when you are
    finished)
  • Turn over the paper I just handed out and
    complete it.
  • First, you are certain to recognize words you did
    not recall, demonstrating the superiority of
    recognition to recall memory.
  • Second, how many of you recalled and wrote
  • down the following
  • pain (last item)
  • thread (first item)
  • point (middle item)
  • sharp (middle item)

5
  • What is it called when you remember the first
    and last parts better than the middle?
  • Serial position effect
  • How many recalled and wrote down the word needle.
    On the first list you made?
  • On the recognition task, ask how many gave
    needle a 3 or 4?
  • False Memory. It was not on the verbal list.

6
Memory Construction- itinerary
  • Misinformation Effect
  • Childrens Memories
  • Hypnosis (in general), drugs, therapy
  • Traumatic events
  • Rosanne Barr
  • Eyewitness Testimony
  • Picking Cotton
  • Environmental Contexts Internal Emotional States
  • Déjà vu
  • Types of Amnesia
  • Ten Second Tom

7
Misinformation effect
  • Misinformation effect- when after exposure to
    subtle misinformation, many people misremember.
  • Memories are not stored as exact copies,
  • We construct our memories, using both stored and
    new information.
  • In many experiments, people have witnessed an
    event, received or not received misleading
    information about it, and then taken a memory
    test.

8
Misinformation effect
  • Consider two witnesses to a car accident. (Billy
    and Sally).
  • Billy is asked by a policeman, How fast was the
    car going when it smashed into the other vehicle
  • Sally is asked by another policeman, How fast
    was the car going when it bumped into the other
    vehicle.
  • Billys constructed memory will increase in
    numbers in comparison from Sallys. Influenced by
    the descriptive words smashed and bumped.

9
Misinformation effect
  • Misinformation effect can be caused by
  • Leading questions
  • Influence of people filling in gaps in memory
  • Other testimony
  • Repeated imagining and rehearsing nonexistent
    events cause false memories (imagination
    inflation).
  • Source Amnesia- attribute to the wrong source an
    event the we have experienced, heard about, read
    about, or imagined. (Ex. Dreaming an event and
    trying to determine if it happened or it was a
    dream)

10
Psychologists Questions on Misinformation Effect
  • When are people susceptible to misinformation?
  • Time (discrepancy detection principle)
  • Subtle exposure
  • Who is susceptible to misinformation?
  • Young children
  • Memory performance rises up to the age of 20
  • Falls sharply at the age of 65
  • What happens to the original memory?
  • a. After much research it is commonly believed
    that misinformation does impair the original
    details of memory.
  • Do people genuinely believe the misinformation?
  • a. It is believed that people report
    misinformation confidently because they have the
    need to be good at recalling events.

11
Childrens Memories
  • Preschool Children are sensitive to suggestion,
    and their recollections of sexual abuse may be
    prone to error. (can be given suggestive
    interviewing techniques)
  • Day Care Cases in 1980s- mass abuse. Falsely
    reported by children who were influenced by the
    interviewers.
  • Innocent people have been falsely convicted of
    abuse that never happened, and true abusers have
    sued the controversy over recovered memories to
    avoid punishment.

12
Repressed and Recovered Memories
  • Psychologists agree that
  • Abuse happens and can leave lasting scars
  • Some innocent people have been falsely convicted
    of abuse that never happened and some true
    abusers have used the controversy over recovered
    memories to avoid punishment
  • Forgetting isolated good and bad memories
    triggered by some memory cue is commonplace
  • Infantile amnesia-inability to recall memories
    from the first three years of life makes recovery
    of very early childhood memories very unlikely.
  • Both real and false memories cause stress and
    suffering.

13
Hypnosis and Traumatic experiences
  • Memories recovered under hypnosis or drugs or
    therapy are especially unreliable. Especially for
    children as are memories of things happening
    before age 3. (infantile amnesia)
  • Traumatic experiences are usually vividly
    remembered, not banished into an active but
    inaccessible unconscious.

14
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15
Eyewitness Memory
  • Now turn over the True False 8-9 sheet on
    Eyewitness Memory sheet and complete it. On
    statement 9, 28 experts indicated that the
    reverse is probably true.
  • All the statements on the handout except
    statement 9 as true.

16
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17
Environmental contexts and internal emotional
states on retrieval.
  • State Dependent Memories- tendency to recall
    information best in the same emotional state
    (mood) as when the information was learned.
  • Context Dependent Memories- being in a context
    similar to one weve been in before may trick us
    into subconsciously
  • retrieving an earlier experience.

18
What is déjà vu?
  • The term deja vu is French and means, literally,
    "already seen." Those who have experienced the
    feeling describe it as an overwhelming sense of
    familiarity with something that shouldn't be
    familiar at all.
  • Younger people experience Deja vu more
    frequently, then the elder.
  • Deja vu has been firmly associated with
    temporal-lobe epilepsy. It can occur just prior
    to a temporal-lobe seizure. People suffering a
    seizure of this kind can experience deja vu
    during the actual seizure activity or in the
    moments between convulsions.
  • It could be simple fantasy or wish fulfillment,
    while some psychiatrists ascribe it to a
    mismatching in the brain that causes the brain to
    mistake the present for the past.

19
Types of Amnesia (memory loss)
  • Infantile Amnesia- inability of adults to
    remember the earliest years of their childhood.
    The amnesia generally covers events from birth
    until around three years old.
  • Retrograde Amnesia -someone will be unable to
    recall events that occurred before the
    development of amnesia
  • Anterograde Amnesia - loss of the ability to
    create memories after the event that caused the
    amnesia occurs. (Such as Ten Second Tom)

20
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