Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Human Memory
- 3 Basic Processes
- Encoding
- How memories are formed
- Three levels of Processing
- 3) Semantic encoding : deep processing
- You learn the meaning so you have to think about it.
- 2) Phonemic encoding : intermediate processing
- Saying word silently or aloud
- 1) Structural encoding : Shallow processing
- Words flashed on a screen and you may recall in
capital letters or length of the word
- Storage
- How memories are kept over time
- Retrieval
- How memories are recovered and translated into performance
- Context Cue
- Information about a word that helps one understand the words meaning
- Short Term Memory
- Limited capacity store that can maintain unrehearsed information for up to 20 seconds
- Capacity
- George Miller (1956) Number of items
that can be recalled from short-term
memory, in order, on half of the tested
memory trials is about 7 plus or minus 2
memories
- Long Term Memory
- Unlimited capacity store that can hold information for days, weeks, or years.
- Can be permanent ( your name )
- Flashbulb Memories
- Vivid and detailed recollections of momentous events that become "burned in"
- Recent research shows that they may not be permanent or accurate
- Rather like other memories, they become less detailed and accurate with time.
They are special because people are influenced by emotion and are more
attached to these memories
- Conceptual Hierarchies
- Schemas
- An organized cluster of knowledge about a particular
object or event which we understand from previous
experience
- Semantic Networks
- Nodes represent concepts are
joined to related concepts
- Multilevel classification system
- Forgetting
- Ebbinghaus Forgetting Curve
- It graphs retention, concluded that
forgetting occurs right after learning. Unless
it is something meaningful
- Three Measures of Retention
- 1) Recall
- Requires subjects to reproduce
information in their own
without any cues
- 2) Recognition
- Requires the subject to
select previously learned
information from a
number of options
- 3) Relearning
- Requires a subject to memorize information a
second time to determine how much time or effort
is saved by having learned it before
- Ineffective Coding
- Thinking that one has forgotten something but it really has
never been remembered. This is called pseudoforgetting and it
usually happens due to lack of attention
- Seven Sins of Memory
- Transcience
- General deterioration of memory over time
- Absent-mindedness
- Attention and memory interface
- Misattribution
- Correct information, incorrect information about the source
- Bias
- Emotions and perspective
can distort information of
past events
- Suggestibility
- Acceptance of false informtaion
- Persistence
- Unwanted recall of information
- Blocking
- Brain tries to receive information but
another memory intereferes
- Implicit memory
- Explicit Memory
- Intentionally remembering something may be handled by different memory
systems because explicit memory, but not memory is affected by amnesia, age,
alcohl, and intereference
- Remembering something you did not intend to memorize
- Episodic Memory
- Semantic Memory
- General facts
- personal facts and experiences
- Prospective memory
- Retrospective Memory
- Refers to remembering past events or facts
- Refers to recalling something you must do in the future
- Improve Memory
- Mnemonic Systems
- Verbal Mnemonic devices
- Rehearsal
- Repeating words over and over or thinking about information
- Rhyme
- Thirty days hath September
- Narrative Method
- Make a story or a song
- Visual Mnemonic devices
- Visual Imagery
- Creating mental picturess to represent the information you want to remember
- Chunking
- Storing information into
meaningful or familiar
units
- Method od Loci
- Associate items to be remembered
with specific locations
- Declarative Memory
- Handles factual information like definitions of words, math concepts, faces, dates.
- Likely handled by the medial temporal lobe and parts of the cortex it communicates with
- Procedural Memory
- Memory for actions, skills and conditioned responses. May be related to implicit memory.
- Typing , riding a bike
- It is not conscious much like implicit memory is.