Module 2 Memory
Module 2 Memory
What Is Memory?
Memory is the process in which information is encoded,
stored, and retrieved
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.
• 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.
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.
• 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
brain.
brain.
recall it
• It is of two types
• Retroactive Interference:
– Retroactive interference occurs when newer information learned interferes
• Proactive Interference:
– Proactive interference occurs when something that we previously learned
• It occurs when information has not actually been lost from long term memory,
Types
• It occurs when environmental cues that were present when learning took place are
• It occurs if emotional state in which we were present when information was learnt
forgetting.
Types
• Repression:
• Suppression:
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