0% found this document useful (0 votes)
9 views25 pages

Module 2 Memory

Memory is the process of encoding, storing, and retrieving information, involving stages such as sensory register, short-term memory, and long-term memory. Recall and recognition are two methods of retrieving information, with recognition being easier due to cues. Forgetting can occur due to various theories including decay, interference, and retrieval failure, and techniques like mnemonics can enhance memory retention.

Uploaded by

Sonam Gondlekar
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
9 views25 pages

Module 2 Memory

Memory is the process of encoding, storing, and retrieving information, involving stages such as sensory register, short-term memory, and long-term memory. Recall and recognition are two methods of retrieving information, with recognition being easier due to cues. Forgetting can occur due to various theories including decay, interference, and retrieval failure, and techniques like mnemonics can enhance memory retention.

Uploaded by

Sonam Gondlekar
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 25

MEMORY

What Is Memory?
Memory is the process in which information is encoded,
stored, and retrieved

Information Processing Perspective


• Encoding: receiving, processing and combining of received
information
• Storage: creation of a permanent record of the encoded information

• Retrieval, recall or recollection: calling back the stored information in


response to some cue for use in a process or activity
Measuring Memory - Recall & Recognition
RECOGNITION
• Recognition is a response to a sensory cue. When you see something, you compare it to
information stored in your memory, and if you find a match, you "recognize" it.

Recognition Example
• A police line-up is a classic exercise in recognition. You look at several people, and compare
each to the person you saw commit the crime.

RECALL
• Recall is the retrieval of information from memory without a cue. There is a question, and
you must search your memory for the answer.

Recall Example
• Say that instead of looking at a lineup, you have to describe the person you saw to a sketch
artist. This is an exercise in recall. The artist may try to help your recollection by asking
questions, but ultimately you have to find the information yourself.

COMPARISON
• Because it is cued, recognition is easier than recall. A simple illustration of this is recognizing
a familiar face almost instantly, but struggling to come up with the person's name.
Three Box Model of Memory
Sensory Register
• Information can be held for a very brief time in sensory channels. This storage
function of sensory channels is called Sensory Register.
• Most of the information is quickly lost.
• Only information that we recognize & pay attention to is passed on to STM for
further processing.
• Characteristics
– Content is just a representation of physical characteristics of the stimulus.

– It has relatively large capacity.

– It has a brief duration.

– It is of 2 types: Visual Sensory/Iconic Memory & Auditory Sensory/Echoic


Memory
Short Term Memory
• It holds information received from Sensory Register for about 30 secs

• STM has limited capacity for processing information; approximately 7 +/- 2

• Rehearsal and chunking are very important in the transfer of information


from STM to LTM.
• Chunking
– Units of memory are called chunks

– E.g. Mobile numbers, A/C No’s

• Ways of Rehearsal
• Maintenance Rehearsal: Just going over and over what is to be remembered. It is
not that efficient in transferring the information.
• Elaborative Rehearsal: Involves giving the material organization and meaning and it
leads to proper transfer.

Advantage: It is easy to search information through STM


Long Term Memory
• It is the storehouse for information that must be kept for long periods of time.

Characteristics
• Since amount of information stored in LTM is vast, we cannot scan all the
contents; so it has to be indexed.
• Information is stored in terms of meaning or semantic codes.
• Forgetting in LTM occurs not because of rehearsal but it does when we are
unable to retrieve information for some reason.

Types of Long Term Memory


• Episodic: Deals with individuals personal experiences. It consists of not only
what happened but also when & where it happened.
• Semantic: It is organized set of knowledge one has acquired and stored.
• Procedural: It refers to way we remember how things are done
Short-Term Memory
Capacity
Memory-Span Test

• Read the top row of digits, then look away and repeat
them back in order. Continue until a mistake is made.
Short-Term Memory
The Serial-Position Effect

• Serial Position Curve


– Indicates the tendency
to recall more items
from the beginning and
end of a list than from
the middle.
• Primacy & Recency Effect
Long-Term Memory
Retrieval
• Explicit Memory
– The type of memory elicited through the conscious
retrieval of recollections in response to direct questions.
– Conscious retention, direct tests, disrupted by amnesia,
encoded in the hippocampus
• Implicit Memory
– A non conscious recollection of a prior experience that is
revealed indirectly, by its effects on performance.
– Nonconscious retention, indirect tests, intact with
amnesia, encoded elsewhere
Long-Term Memory
Retrieval
Implicit Memory in Everyday Life
• Déjà vu
– A sense of familiarity but no real memory
• The false-fame effect
– Names presented only once, familiarity but no real
memory, assume person is famous
• Eyewitness transference
– Face is familiar, but situation in which they remembering
seeing face is incorrect
• Unintentional plagiarism
– Take credit for someone else’s ideas without awareness
Long-Term Memory
Reconstruction
“Office” Schema

• Study this picture for 30


seconds.
Forgetting:
Why It Occurs?
Meaning of Forgetting
• Forgetting is loss of information in the retention stage.
• It is due to inadequate encoding, poor organization, and
difficulties with retrieval.
Theories of Forgetting
• Decay Theory
• Interference Theory
• Retrieval Failure
• Motivated Forgetting
Decay Theory
• When new material is learnt, it leaves a TRACE in the

brain.

• This trace involves some sort of physical change in the

brain.

• With passage of time, due to metabolic processes of

brain, these traces fade away/decay & eventually

disintegrate & disappear.


Interference Theory

• The interference theory of forgetting suggest that we forget something

because other information that is learned interferes with our ability to

recall it

• It is of two types

• Retroactive Interference:
– Retroactive interference occurs when newer information learned interferes

with remembering previously learned information.

• Proactive Interference:
– Proactive interference occurs when something that we previously learned

interferes with remembering newer information.


Retrieval failure Theory
• Retrieval failure is sometimes called cue-dependent forgetting

• It occurs when information has not actually been lost from long term memory,

rather a faulty or ineffective cue has been used to retrieve it.

• Cue present during learning is absent at the time of retrieval

Types

• Context Dependent Forgetting:

• It occurs when environmental cues that were present when learning took place are

absent at the time of recall.

• State Dependent Memory:

• It occurs if emotional state in which we were present when information was learnt

is no longer available at the time of recall


Motivated Forgetting
• It stresses on persons motives in remembering and

forgetting.

Types

• Repression:

– We are unable to recall some memories because we have

unconsciously repressed such memories

• Suppression:

– We consciously suppress unpleasant memories.


How To Remember Better?
Mnemonics
• Mnemonic strategies are memory aids that provide a
systematic approach for organizing and remembering facts
that have no apparent link or connection of their own.

• Mnemonics provide the tools necessary to memorize and


recall almost any information
Peg-Word Method
• It involves use of counting from one to ten to remember new info.
• Example: One is a bun; two is a shoe; three is a tree; etc.
• Uses interactive mental imagery – associating a cue with a target memory in a single
image.
• Like having pegs on a wall to hang coats, you can go retrieve coats off the peg. Likewise,
with the peg-word method, you can retrieve items to be remembered.

Method of Loci
• It means method of locations
• Uses sequence of locations that are already known
• To remember items, we must picture ourselves walking through the various locations,
depositing objects to be remembered in each location – a clear image must be created
for each item.
• To recall the items, once again, we imagine ourselves walking through locations,
retrieving the items.
PQRST Method
PQRST is an acronym for Preview, Question, Read, Summary, Test.
• Preview: The student looks at the topic to be learned by glancing over the major
headings or the points in the syllabus.
• Question: The student formulates questions to be answered following a thorough
examination of the topics.
• Read: The student reads through the related material, focusing on the information
that best relates to the questions formulated earlier.
• Summary: The student summarizes the topic, bringing his or her own understanding
into the process. This may include written notes, spider diagrams, flow diagrams,
labelled diagrams, mnemonics, or even voice recordings.
• Test: The student answers the questions drafted earlier, avoiding adding any questions
that might distract or change the subject.
Acronyms
• An acronym is a word formed from the first letters or groups of letters in a name or
phrase.
• These can be used as mnemonic devices by taking the first letters of words or names
that need to be remembered and developing an acronym or acrostic.
• Example: DNA, ABCD etc

Chunking & Organization


• Chunking is simply a way of breaking down larger pieces of information into smaller,
organized “chunks” of more easily-managed information.
• Example: Telephone numbers
• Information can be organized into objective or subjective categories.
• Objective Organization: It is placing information into well-recognized, logical
categories. Example: Trees and grass are plants; a cricket is an insect.
• Subjective Organization: It is categorizing seemingly unrelated items in a way that
helps you recall the items later.
• This can also be useful because it breaks down the amount of information to learn.
Imagery
• Visual imagery is a great way to help memorize items for some people.
• It’s often used to memorize pairs of words (green grass, yellow sun, blue water, etc.).
• Imagery usually works best with smaller pieces of information.
• For instance, when trying to remember someone’s name you’ve just been introduced
to. You can imagine a pirate with a wooden leg for “Peggy,” or a big grizzly bear for
“Harry.”

You might also like