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AP Psychology Unit VII: Memory Modules 32 & 33: Storing memories, Retrieving memories, Why we forget, Memory construction, and memory improvement
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Module 32-Memory Storage & Retrieval
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Memory Storage Memories are NOT stored in one part of of the brain.
Brain networks encode, store, & retrieve our memories Many parts of the brain are involved in these processes
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Explicit-Memory System
Frontal Lobes Working memory processing Different memories processed in each lobe Left lobe-words/numbers Right lobe-visual memories
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Explicit-Memory System
Hippocampus helps process explicit memories for storage Damage/injury can cause retrieval problems Left hippocampus-seems to be responsible for recalling verbal information Right hippocampus-seems to be responsible for recall ing visual information & locations Consolidation During sleep, the hippo campus processes memories for later retrieval
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Implicit-Memory System
Cerebellum formation & storage of implicit memories created by classical conditioning Basal Ganglia Typically involved with motor movement; help form memories for performing skills Infantile amnesia Reactions & skills learned in infancy stay with us as adults, even though our conscious memories of that time are blank
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Emotions and Memory Emotions trigger release of stress hormones
(among other things) these hormones make more glucose available to the brain-signals that something important has happened Provoke the amygdala Initiates a memory in the frontal lobes & basal ganglia Boosts activity in other memory-forming areas Emotional arousal can mark certain events as important to remember, and disrupt memory formation for non-important events from the same time Flashbulb Memories
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Synaptic Changes Research with sea slugs indicated that serotonin is released into synapses when learning occurred Long-term potentiation (LTP) Human experiments have shown that rapidly stimulating memory-circuit connections (both the sending & receiving neurons) increases the connections between neurons & made it easier for sending neurons to release NTs Provides a neural basis for learning & remembering Research (with rats/mice) confirms that LTP is a physical basis for memory
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Memory Retrieval Measuring Retention Retrieval Cues
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Measuring Retention 3 ways to measure retention:
Recall-retrieval of information learned earlier that isn’t currently in your conscious awareness fill-in-the-blank test Recognition-identify items previously learned multiple-choice test Relearning-learning something more quickly when learning it a second (or later) time Reviewing for a final exam (AP Exam)
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Retrieval Cues Priming Context-Dependent Memory State-Dependent Memory
Serial Position Effect
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Priming The activation, often unconsciously, of associations in memory
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Context/State-Dependent Memory
Context-dependent memory: it is easier to retrieve certain memories when circumstances around the memory are same for both the original encoding and retrieval Returning to an old class room/home can trigger retrieval of memories State-dependent memory: easier to retrieve certain memories when you are in the same state (emotional, mental, etc) as when the memory was originally encoded Memories formed when depressed are more likely to be retrieved in a future state of depression Mood-congruent theory
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Serial Position Effect
Tendency to recall the last and first items in a list better than the other items on the same list Recency effect-ability to recall the last items from a list, likely because the information is still in our working memory Primacy effect-best recall for the first items on a list, likely because more time was spent rehearsing them
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Exit Ticket Explain how the roles of the hippocampus & frontal lobes differ from the roles of the cerebellum & basal ganglia in memory processing. Identify & explain what LTP is. Give one example of serial position effect.
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Module 33-Why we forget, memory construction, and memory improvement
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Why we forget The two-track mind Encoding failure Storage decay
Retrieval failure
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The Two-Track Mind Effortful processing-explicit memories
Automatic processing-implicit memories Anterograde amnesia: loss of the ability to form new (explicit) memories Often the ability to form new (implicit) memories remains Retrograde amnesia: inability to retrieve information from one’s past (stored in long-term memory)
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Encoding Failure What we don’t notice, we don’t encode
What we fail to encode, we can never remember
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Storage Decay Even after successful encoding, we can later forget information (Hermann) Ebbinghaus curve: forgetting is rapid at first, then levels off over time 1 possible explanation is a gradual fading of the physical memory trace; unproven (for now) theory
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Retrieval Failure Sometimes, forgotten information is not faded memories, but unretrieved memories
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Retrieval Failure, cont.
Can be caused/worsened by interference and/or motivated forgetting Interference Proactive interference-Prior learning disrupts your recall of new information i.e.- password that you’ve used for year may prevent you from remembering your student account password at school Retroactive interference-New learning disrupts recall of old information i-e.- learning a new recipe may prevent you from being able to remember an older recipe Motivated forgetting The information is there, but we subconsciously choose not to retrieve it because it would be embarrassing or unpleasant to remember it.
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Memory Construction Errors
Misinformation effect Imagination effect Source amnesia Discerning true/false memories
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Misinformation Effect
If exposed to misleading information/questions, we can incorporate that information into our memory retrieval, leading to construction of a false memory
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Imagination Effect Repeatedly imagined actions/events can lead to construction of false memories Altered photos/videos can also result in this effect
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Source Amnesia When we attribute an event (that we’ve experienced, heard about, read about, or imagined) to the wrong source Authors/songwriters Vanilla Ice Déjà vu Cues from a current situation may unconsciously trigger retrieval of an earlier experience that we wrongly attribute as having “done this before”
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Discerning True and False Memories
Nearly impossible to separate suggested ideas from real memories Sometimes the “suggestions” are from outside sources Sometimes the “suggestions” are our own doing-filling in “gaps” in a memory with guesses/assumptions Young children’s recollections can be easily molded
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Repressed or Constructed Memories of Abuse?
Research has shown that children are highly susceptible to suggestive questioning Doesn’t mean children’s eyewitnesses testimony or memories are never accurate, but that care must be taken to question them with non-suggestive, neutral words Areas of agreement Sexual abuse happens Injustice happens Forgetting happens Recovered memories are incomplete Memories before 3 years are unreliable Hypnotic memories are unreliable Memories can be emotionally upsetting
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Improving Memory Research has demonstrated that the following techniques can improve your ability to remember/recall/retrieve information when you need it: Rehearse repeatedly Make the material meaningful Activate retrieval cues Use mnemonic devices Minimize interference Sleep more Test your own knowledge, both to rehearse it and to help determine what you do not yet know
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Exit Ticket Identify and BRIEFLY explain the 4 main reasons we forget
Identify and BRIEFLY explain the 4 main memory construction errors What is important to remember if questioning a child and/or helping him/her to recover memories
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