1 / 34

Memory and

Memory and. its Influences. Vaughan Bell vaughan@backspace.org. Outline. Memory Process Encoding / storage / retrieval Divisions of Memory Sensory memory (very short term) Short term / Working memory Long Term Procedural / Declarative Semantic / Episodic

urbano
Download Presentation

Memory and

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Memory and its Influences Vaughan Bell vaughan@backspace.org

  2. Outline • Memory Process • Encoding / storage / retrieval • Divisions of Memory • Sensory memory (very short term) • Short term / Working memory • Long Term • Procedural / Declarative • Semantic / Episodic • Memory Effects, Distortions and Disorders

  3. Memory Functions • Encoding – the transformation of an event or perception into a memory trace. • Storage – the maintenance of the memory trace for later use. • Retrieval – the use of previously stored information for a current process. • In practice these effects can be quite difficult to separate. • E.g. ‘not remembering’ could result as a failure to any of these three processes.

  4. Divisions of Memory • It is important to remember that the divisions in memory we will talk about are theoretical ones. • There is still a debate in some cases whether the different forms of memory models reflect distinct memory systems… • …or are simply different tasks or processes of the same system.

  5. Sensory Memory • Our senses have some persistence in that a stimulus may still be experienced after it has ceased. • In 1740, Johann Andreas Segner attached a glowing coal to a spinning cartwheel and span the wheel until a complete circle was traced by the coal. • He calculated the speed of the wheel and estimated that the senses must continue experiencing the light from the coal for 100ms to allow this to happen.

  6. Sensory Memory • Sperling (1960) tested a similar phenomena by briefly presenting groups of letters. • [Demonstration here] • Despite being unable to report the whole grid of letters, people can often report any arbitrary line after the whole grid has been presented. • Meaning the whole grid must be retained for a small amount of time. • Visual sensory memory is called iconic memory, the auditory equivalent is called echoic memory.

  7. Short Term Memory • The best evidence for a distinction between long term memory and STM is from neuropsychology. • Scoville and Milner (1957) reported that Patient HM demonstrated normal short term verbal recall, as measured by a digit span task… • …but grossly impaired LTM, being unable to retain new information for more than a few minutes. • Shallice and Warrington (1970) reported the reverse in Patient KF, who could retain new information permanently but had a grossly impaired digit span.

  8. Short Term Memory • Digits are only one sort of ‘thing’ that we can remember, but what determines a ‘thing’ ? • George Miller (1956) argued that we use ‘chunking’ to group information into units for verbal STM. • A chunk could be a single digit, or a word, or a meaningful number (e.g. 1969) or any integrated piece of information. • Miller demonstrated that we can, on average, retain 7 plus or minus 2 chunks in STM. • STM lasts far approximately 10 seconds (textbooks tend to say anything between 2 and 15).

  9. Working Memory • Often we are manipulating information in STM to solve problems (e.g. mental arithmetic). • The ability to do STM manipulations is co-ordinated by what Baddeley and Hitch (1974) call the ‘central executive’. Central executive Visual spatial scratchpad Phonological loop

  10. Working Memory • Baddeley’s model has been extended since its 1974 incarnation and the ‘executive system’ is now regarded in a far wider sense. • It seems to have a role in many skills (not just memory) that involve the co-ordination of cognitive resources or attention. • E.g. social interaction and abstract thinking. • It is particularly associated with the prefrontal cortex and damage to this area can produce particular memory pathologies. • Such as confabulation and over-recognition.

  11. Long Term Memory • Previous accounts of LTM had considered it as a single store. • It has become increasingly apparent, largely from the effects of brain injury on memory that this is not the case. • Tulving (1983) made the distinction between three LTM components: • Semantic Memory • Episodic Memory • Procedural Memory

  12. LTM Components • Semantic memoryis memory for ‘general knowledge of the world’, e.g. facts, names, places. • Recall from semantic memory does not necessarily involves recollection of the occasion when the information was first learnt. • e.g. what is the capital of France ? • Episodic memory is associated with the remembrance of our personally experienced past. • It is associated with a kind of conscious awareness that characterises the recollection of past happenings. • e.g. what happened on your 18th birthday ?

  13. LTM Components • Procedural memory is for actions you have learnt to do by doing them. • It is characterised by unconscious automatic retrieval • e.g. riding a bike • Conditioning could also be classified as procedural memory. • It is more difficult to classify procedural memory by system or content. • Rather, certain forms of learning have procedural qualities.

  14. Procedural vs Declarative • The philosopher Gilbert Ryle (1949) argued for a distinction between ‘knowing how’ and ‘knowing that’. • Cohen and Squire (1982) have argued that LTM can be understood purely in these terms. • They consider both episodic and semantic memory as a unitary system called declarative memory. • Literally, memory you can ‘declare’ or state as a proposition. • This argument is given some weight by amnesia studies.

  15. Amnesia Studies • Anterograde amnesia is of particular interest, this is the inability to form new long term memories, with the spared ability to recall old ones • It be particularly striking after damage to the hippocampus or connected neural pathways. • In reality, damage that causes AA will also produce some retrograde amnesia, so some memories from before the insult will be lost. • With newer memories more likely to be lost than older ones (the ‘temporal gradient’).

  16. Amnesia Studies • The links between different types of LTM have been investigated by studying amnesia. • e.g. if episodic and semantic memory are different systems, it is possible they may be individually impaired. In practice this is more difficult to find. • Gabrielli et al (1988) Amnesic Patient HM, who has no episodic memory, has only learnt 8 new words since amnesia inducing surgery. • Butters (1984) A similarly impaired Patient PZ showed an identical temporal gradient for semantic and episodic information.

  17. Amnesia Studies • However, more recent studies (e.g. Kitchener et al, 1998) have shown word learning in an amnesic patient with no episodic recall. • Although the patients learning is not normal, it does support the division between episodic and semantic memory. • This is an area of ongoing debate !

  18. Forgetting • This is a particularly import memory process. • A.R. Luria (1968) reported on S, a person with near perfect recall (as well as synaesthesia). • Unfortunately, S’s lack of forgetting caused him serious problems. • He could not block unwanted memories and often found he remembered things too exactly. • For example, when people changed their appearance he couldn’t recognise them as the same person.

  19. Forgetting • Herman Ebbinghaus (1893) was first to study forgetting in any great detail. • He studied his ability to remember nonsense syllables (like TUV and DIL) over time. • He produced a forgetting curve that still holds to this day. • Demonstrating that we forget most information quickly and the rest remains fairly constantly.

  20. Forgetting Curve • Ebbinghaus argued that forgetting was due to spontaneous decay and interference.

  21. The Role of Context • The context in which we encode or retrieve memories can affect our memory performance. • Godden and Baddeley (1975) demonstrated this with divers. • They asked divers to learn 40 words either underwater or on dry land. • The words were recalled better when they were recalled in the same environment they were learnt in.

  22. Schemas • Of course, our own knowledge and assumptions are also a context. • Frederick Bartlett’s (1932) famous War of the Ghosts study demonstrated that memory can be influenced by our past experience. • He called this past experience a schema, i.e. an internal model of how we expect a situation to be. • Bartlett showed we tend to mould ambiguous information into the schema during encoding and recall.

  23. Encoding Specificity • Tulving (1972) argues that retrieval relies on matching retrieval cues to aspects of a stored memory trace. • He suggested the success is largely dependent on the amount of overlap between these two.

  24. Encoding Specificity Demo • Write down the first line of: • Marvin Gaye’s “I Heard it Through the Grapevine” • Now do the same after listening to the intro. • Actual first line.

  25. Encoding Specificity • According to encoding specificity theory, you should be more likely to remember the 1st line of the song after hearing the intro. • Because the more associated information we have the more likely we are to retrieve an associated memory. • However, this can sometimes cause false recall or distortions.

  26. Wade et al (2003) • This study used digital image manipulation to place create fake photos of fictional events.

  27. Wade et al (2003) • Using an interview based on a current procedures usedin abuse cases… • 50% of participants created complete or partial false memories. “But I’m still pretty certain it occurred when I was in form one (6th grade) at um the local school there . . . Um basically for $10 or something you could go up in a hot air balloon and go up about 20 odd meters . . . it would have been a Saturday and I think we went with, yeah, parents and, no it wasn’t, not my grandmother…” - extract from participant S.B.

  28. Roediger and McDermott (1995) • Used a technique known as the Deese, Roediger and McDermott (DRM) paradigm. • [DRM demo here] • Both these studies demonstrate that memory can be easily fooled and manipulated. • And that our confidence in our memory is not necessarily a good measure of its accuracy.

  29. Source Monitoring • Johnson (1988) - we establish the accuracy by using a source monitoring framework. • She argues we distinguish between perception, memories and belief using: • sensory detail • embeddedness in supporting memories, knowledge and belief • the absence of memory for, or consciousness of, the cognitive operations producing the mental event.

  30. Source Monitoring • In other words, we infer the source of a memory by its properties. • This may suggest how the DRM paradigm and other false memory induction techniques work. • Research suggests that some people may be more liable to these sort of memory distortions.

  31. Memory Distortion in Psychosis • Brebion et al (2002) reported source monitoring impairments in people with schizophrenia. • Such as intrusions, interference between tests, false recognition and source confusion. • These effects were positively correlated with positive symptoms. • And negatively correlated with negative symptoms. • Suggesting memory distortions may be a factor in delusions, hallucinations or thought disorder.

  32. Clancy et al (2002) • These effects may also be present in people who are not mentally ill. • Clancy et al (2002) advertised for “people who may have been contacted or abducted by space aliens”. • Tested memory with the DRM paradigm. • ‘Abductees’ able to remember words from the original list as well as non-abductees • …but tended to show a higher rate of recall and recognition for words that were never read out.

  33. Conclusions • Our understanding of memory is dependent on the tasks we use to measure and examine it. • We must be careful not to confuse the task with the natural organisation of memory. • If I find fruit pickers have a better memory for apples, it does not mean there is a special fruit memory system. • However, some divisions of memory seem to be well supported by a variety of sources, including healthy participants and brain injured patients.

  34. Conclusions • There are influences on encoding, storage and retrieval that can cause memory distortions. • Memory distortions may be the basis of misperceptions from the trivial (misrecognising someone)… • …to the unsual (alien abduction beliefs)… • ...to the pathological (psychosis).

More Related