Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Memory- interference
- When one piece of information
blocks another, causing distortion or
forgetting
- Proactive interference
- Older memory interferes with new memory
- Your name is Louis. Your teacher had a
student in her class last year called Lewis, and she
keeps calling you Lewis rather than Louis
- Retroactive interference
- Newer memory interferes with old memory
- Your name is Louis. Your teacher had a student in
her class last year called Lewis, but since learning
your name, she can't remember Lewis' name
- Effects of similiarity
- Interference is worse when
memories are similar
- McGeoch and McDonald
- 1931
- Participants all learned the same list of words to 100% accuracy
- They were then given a new list of words
- Group1
- Synonyms
- Most interference
- Group 2
- Antonyms
- Group 3
- Unrelated
words
- Group 4
- Nonsense
syllables
- Group 5
- Three
digit
numbers
- Group 6
- No new list
- Least interferences
- The more similar the word (synonyms) the worse the interference
- Evaluation
- Evidence from lab studies
- Control over extraneous variables
- Increased validity
- Too artificial
- Word lists have no relevance to participants
- Difficult to generalise to everyday life
- Real life studies
- Baddeley, 1977
- Rugby players had to recall
all of the matches they'd
played in a season
- Didn't matter if last match was 3
weeks ago, interference
depended on number of
matches played since
- Best recall if they hadn't played since the last game
- Time between learning
- In real life, the time between learning and
recall can actually be quite long, while in lab
studies it is very short for practical reasons