Age-related changes in encoding, retention and retrieval using studies of operant conditioning

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(Major Cognitive Developments in Early life) development psychology Mapa Mental sobre Age-related changes in encoding, retention and retrieval using studies of operant conditioning, creado por Elizabeth.T.Hill el 29/03/2014.
Elizabeth.T.Hill
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Elizabeth.T.Hill
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Age-related changes in encoding, retention and retrieval using studies of operant conditioning
  1. Early Life Skills:
    1. sucking & turning head = newborn
      1. gross motor skills [kicking legs] = 3-6 months
        1. independent motor skills [reaching] = 6-12 months
          1. fine motor control [manipulate objects = toddler
          2. Test Reactions to Memories:
            1. looking at pictures
              1. sucking on dummy
                1. kicking legs
                  1. manipulating objects
                  2. What develops as memory improves?
                    1. Encoding: older infants learn faster i.e. less demonstration & time needed
                      1. Retention: older remember for longer
                        1. Retrieval: older infants better able to retrieve memories in different situations - generalisation
                          1. younger babies = cannot have different contexts e.g. if mobile has different animals, they have no idea what it is
                            1. older babies/people = if in the same situation remember better than if not in the same e.g. do revision in exam conditions
                            2. Visual Paired Comparison Task:
                              1. familiarisation (old pictures) vs habituation (getting used to it)
                                1. test = a familiar stimulus is paired with a novel stimulus
                                  1. 2 pics on screen = 1. old from habituation task 2. new
                                    1. if remember old pic should look at new more
                                2. High Amplitude Sucking Task:
                                  1. operant conditioning
                                    1. learn the contingency between sucking behaviour and reinforcement [mothers voice]
                                    2. sounds similar to the womb are most reinforcing
                                      1. DeCasper & Spence, 1986 [Dr Seuss readings]
                                      2. Mobile Conjugate Reinforcement:
                                        1. operant conditioning
                                          1. learn contingency between kicking behaviour and reinforcement [movement in mobile]
                                          2. test: 1. need to work out a baseline, 2. give practice time, 3. measure - without anything attached to the string, thus no reinforcement = measure if remember
                                            1. cannot remind before hand otherwise can be retrieval error = storage is mature but recall isn't as mature
                                              1. seem to forget the task rapidly: 2 months = 24hrs, 3 months = 1 week, 6 months = 2 weeks
                                              2. Deferred Imitation: The Puppet Task:
                                                1. 3 actions = remove mitten, shake it, replace the mitten
                                                  1. no practice or verbal cues
                                                    1. 2 groups: control = don't get a demonstration, experimental = get a demonstraion
                                                    2. Improvements in encoding:
                                                      1. younger infants need longer time to encode things
                                                        1. Morgan and Hayne (2006) compared memories of a 1 yr old and a 4 yr old
                                                          1. test: visual pictures, gave an encoding time of 5, 10 or 30 secs encoding, tested memory 24hrs later and 1 week later
                                                            1. 4yr olds gave more preference to older pics even if only saw for 5 secs
                                                              1. longer encoding time = better retreival
                                                          2. memory and language development:
                                                            1. if cannot speak how r memories encoded:
                                                              1. Encoding Specificity Hypothesis: pre-verbal memories might not be translated into a verbal memory = Magic Shrinking Machine
                                                            2. Magic Shrinking Machine: Simcock & Hayne 2002
                                                              1. 27, 33 & 39 months old children
                                                                1. demonstrated the actions of the machine, then tested language and knowledge at T1
                                                                  1. tested 6 months & 12 months later: free recall [tell me everything you remember], direct questions [what are the names of the toys], photography recognition [1 target 3 distractors], behavioural [re-enactment], then language tested
                                                                    1. 6 months = younger infants recognition of actions is good, 12 months = older infants re-enact very well
                                                                    2. language assessment: 23 target words: children didn't use any new words, only used words that were encoded, thus cannot describe old with new words
                                                                      1. behavioural memories = really good, verbal = memory not as good
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