Memory Notes
Memory Notes
Nature of Memory
1. Definition:
o Memory involves retaining and recalling information over time, ranging
from seconds to years.
2. Stages of Memory: (a) Encoding:
o Initial recording and registration of information.
o Stimuli are processed and represented meaningfully for further use.
(b) Storage:
(c) Retrieval:
1. Sensory Memory:
o Function: Registers sensory inputs briefly (less than a second).
o Characteristics: Large capacity but rapid decay (e.g., iconic and echoic
memories for visual and auditory inputs).
2. Short-Term Memory (STM):
o Function: Holds limited information for a short time (up to 30 seconds).
o Capacity: 7 ± 2 items; expandable via chunking.
o Encoding: Primarily acoustic, but semantic encoding can occur.
o Retention: Maintained via maintenance rehearsal.
3. Long-Term Memory (LTM):
o Function: Permanent store with vast capacity.
o Encoding: Mainly semantic; stores information indefinitely.
MEMORY NOTES
o Retrieval Failures: Perceived forgetting often arises from difficulty in
retrieving stored information.
4. Information Transfer:
o Control Processes:
Selective Attention: Moves information from sensory memory to
STM.
Maintenance Rehearsal: Retains information in STM through
repetition.
Elaborative Rehearsal: Links new information to existing knowledge
in LTM for better retention.
5. Criticism of Stage Model:
o Evidence like KF’s case (normal LTM but impaired STM) challenges the
distinctiveness of STM and LTM.
o Encoding types (acoustic/semantic) can occur in both STM and LTM,
questioning their separation.
1. Concept:
o Memory retention depends on how information is perceived, analyzed, and
understood.
2. Processing Levels:
o Shallow Processing:
Focuses on physical or structural features (e.g., letter shapes, case, ink
color).
Produces fragile memory prone to decay.
o Intermediate Processing:
Focuses on phonetic sounds (e.g., sounds of letters forming a word).
Memory remains weak and temporary.
o Deep Processing:
Focuses on the meaning of information (semantic encoding).
Includes connecting meaning with experiences or visualizing (e.g.,
imagining a cat as a furry mammal).
Produces durable memory, resistant to forgetting.
3. Implications for Learning:
o Understanding and elaborating meaning leads to better retention.
o Avoid rote memorization; instead, relate information to concepts and
experiences for long-term memory.
1. Declarative Memory:
o Definition: Memory of facts, names, and dates.
o Examples: "India became independent on August 15, 1947"; "a rickshaw has
three wheels."
o Subtypes:
Episodic Memory: Personal life experiences; often emotional (e.g.,
feeling when standing first in class).
MEMORY NOTES
Semantic Memory: General knowledge and facts; affect-neutral (e.g.,
meaning of "non-violence," 2+6=8).
2. Procedural Memory:
o Definition: Memory for skills and procedures.
o Examples: Riding a bicycle, making tea, playing basketball.
o Characteristics: Difficult to verbalize compared to declarative memory.
Enhancing Memory