Memory and Thought Unit 6 Exploring Psychology John Kingsley came to our attention in a shocking news story about an 83-year-old Alzheimer’s patient.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Module 11 Types of Memory.
Advertisements

M EMORY Chapter Review. Process by which we retain and recall something learned or experienced.
Memory - fundamental component of daily life - it is the storage of learned information for retrieval and future use.
MEMORY. A huge problem  Eye witness testimony  Witnesses are not always right, even if they are certain  Picking the wrong “rapist”  How could this.
Cody Reardon Human Behavior
Chapter 10 Memory & Thought
What is memory? The mental process of registering, storing and retrieving information. There are different types of memory. Who can remember what they.
Memory and Thought.
Memory and Thought.
Memory and Thought.
Memory Chapter 6.
Memory What would it be like to be John Kingsley?.
Chapter 7 - Memory Psychology McGonigle- College Prep/ Honors.
Memory. Interesting Video  Color Changing Card Trick Color Changing Card Trick.
MEMORY & INTELLIGENCE.
Three Memory Processes Memory = the storage and retrieval of what one has either learned or experienced.
Ch. 7 Memory and Thought. Memory and Thought The storage of retrieval of what has been learned or experienced is called memory When remembering information.
Memory Taking in and Storing Information. What do we remember? Phone numbers Social Security Number Lyrics Dates/Birthdays Names Movie lines Write down.
Memory MEMORY. Memory What is the point of learning? Without memories…learning would mean nothing to us, right?
Memory. Definition Process by which we recollect prior experiences & skills learned in the past.
Memory Taking in and Storing Information. What do we remember? Phone numbers Social Security Number Lyrics Dates/Birthdays Names Movie lines Write down.
PS Introduction to Psychology December 12, 2011 Memory.
Chapter 7 Memory. Which Ones are the Dwarfs? Grouchy GabbyFearfulSleepy SmileyJumpyHopefulShy DroopyDopeySniffyWishfulPuffy DumpySneezyLazyPop GrumpyBashfulCheerfulTeach.
Think back to your childhood and recall your earliest memory. Include stories told by family, and the roles that such memories serve in shaping an individual’s.
Memory liudexiang. contents The sensory registers Short term memory Long term memory forgetting.
Chapter 7 Memory.
Memory & Thought Learning Unit. Memory and Thought John Kingsley came to our attention in a shocking news story about an 83- year-old Alzheimer’s patient.
Memory Pre- Class: Please complete the “Test your Memory” quiz in your packets. When you are done, please sit quietly and wait for the rest of the class.
Module 11 Types of Memory.
Persistence of learning over time.  With memory, mind like a computer  Requires three steps:
THREE MEMORY PROCESSES  Encoding – making a mental representation to be placed into memory (meaningful association)  Storing – placing encoded information.
Module 11 Types of Memory. INTRODUCTION Definitions –Memory ability to retain information over time through three processes: encoding, storing, and retrieving.
Chapter 10.1 Memory & Thought: Taking In & Storing Information Mr. McCormick Psychology.
Memory Storage Thru the 3 Basic Stages February 5 th, 2009 Objective: Review memory technique Objective: Review memory technique Review chart (finish.
Chapter 10 Memory and Thought. The Processes of Memory The storage and retrieval of what has been learned or experienced is memory There are three processes.
MEMORY & INTELLIGENCE. MEMORY: The input, storage, and retrieval of what has been learned or experienced.
Memory Li, Kristoffer Daniel Lee, Seoui. What is Memory? An active system that receives information from the senses, puts that information into usable.
Memory Taking in and Storing Information. What do we remember? Write down the very first memory you can think of! How old were you? – Neural pathways.
Chapter 7 Memory is the process by which we recollect prior experiences, information, and skills learned in the past.
TYPES OF MEMORY Sensory Memory – Records information from the senses for up to three seconds – Examples are Iconic (Visual) Memory and Echoic (Auditory)
Memory and Thought The Heart of Cognitive Psychology: Mental processes and their effect on behavior.
Memory and Thought  Explain the three processes of memory  Describe the information-processing model of memory  Identify several memory retrieval processes.
1 Vocabulary –encoding  –storage  –retrieval  –sensory memory  –short-term memory  –maintenance rehearsal  –chunking  –memory  Section 1-2 Reader’s.
Taking In & Storing Information Baylis Memory Memory: The storage & retrieval of what has been learned or experienced ENCODING STORAGE RETRIEVAL.
Memory Chapter 4. Flashbulb Memories : are extremely vivid and apparently permanent memories. are typically of highly emotional and personal events. are.
Do Now 1/22/15 Try to remember (without looking at anything or talking to anyone!): a. Who was your fifth grade teacher? b. What did you eat for lunch.
Section 1: Taking in and Storing Information.   Memory- the storage and retrieval of what has been learned or experienced  3 memory processes  Encoding-
MEMORY, COGNITION & INFORMATION PROCESSING MEMORY The.
Do you agree or disagree with this statement? “Memory is what makes our lives… Without it, we are nothing”.
RETRIEVING INFORMATION Memory Chapter Learning Unit.
Agenda/Announcements Candy Friday! Will your class qualify? Brain Games 1.Remembering this! HW/ Coming up: Human Memory Textbook Questions due Friday!
Welcome to Jeopardy!.
MEMORY The ability to store and retrieve information over time.
Memory Module One: Booklet #8.
Memory Module One: Booklet #8.
Memory and Thought Introduction The Processes of Memory
Click the Speaker button to listen to Exploring Psychology.
A life without memory is no life at all
MEMORY & INTELLIGENCE.
The ability to store and retrieve information over time.
Module 11 Types of Memory.
Taking in and Storing Information
The Processes of Memory
Chapter 10 Memory & Thought
What tricks do you use to remember new information?
Lap 6 Memory and Thought The Heart of Cognitive Psychology:
Memory and Thought.
MEMORY & INTELLIGENCE.
Module 11 Types of Memory.
Presentation transcript:

Memory and Thought Unit 6

Exploring Psychology John Kingsley came to our attention in a shocking news story about an 83-year-old Alzheimer’s 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 Alzheimer’s disease, is alive, but without life. Without a memory of his past, or the ability to remember anything new, John’s life is nothing but the existing moment. -from Psychology: Science, Behavior, and Life by R.H. Ettinger, Robert L. Crooks, and Jean Stein, 1994.

The Which would be more frightening to you – not being able to remember the past or not being able to learn anything new? Why?

Ever Had a Day Like This??? Y ou 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!

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

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.

What do you see? You will have twenty seconds to look at the picture. How many items can you name?

What do you hear?

Our Memory Is Like A Filing Cabinet…

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 subject’s active rehearsal. Long-term –Memory that is stored over extended periods of time.

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

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.

Find the Real Penny

Chunking MTVCIACCCFBIMIALOLBRBONFRWL TBAFYINISNCISTCSUASSCCPWBHS

milk grapes cheese butter apples flour eggs shampoo ground beef bread catsup cereal jelly green beans

(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.

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

Three Systems of Memory Sensory Memory STM (Working) LTM Unattended information is quickly lost Unrehearsed information is quickly lost Some information may be lost over time Sensory Input Maintenance Rehearsal

Stages of Memory Sensory Memory Short-term Memory Long-term Memory CapacityVirtually everything you see or hear at one instant About 7 items in healthy adults Vast, uncountable DurationFraction of a second Less than 20 seconds if not rehearsed. Perhaps a lifetime. ExampleYou 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

Retrieving Information

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 He did not err until the 31,812 th 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 Rajan’s 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

The Question What are your best functions of memory. How good are you at names? How good are you at faces?

Ever Had Days Like This???

The Key to Memory…

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.

George Clooney

Nancy Pelosi

Anna Nicole Smith

James Spann

Katie Couric

Bugs Bunny

Captain Kangaroo

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.

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.

Types of Recall Reconstructive Processes –The alteration of a recalled memory that may be simplified, enriched, or distorted, depending on an individual’s 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.

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

I Can’t Believe I Forgot!!!

Forgetting is Normal It’s called decay. Interference –Blockage of a memory by previous or subsequent memories. Proactive –An earlier memory blocks you from remembering related new information. »You’ve 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. »You’ve 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.

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