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

Descrição

development psychology (Major Cognitive Developments in Early life) Mapa Mental sobre Age-related changes in encoding, retention and retrieval using studies of operant conditioning, criado por Elizabeth.T.Hill em 29-03-2014.
Elizabeth.T.Hill
Mapa Mental por Elizabeth.T.Hill, atualizado more than 1 year ago
Elizabeth.T.Hill
Criado por Elizabeth.T.Hill mais de 10 anos atrás
35
0

Resumo de Recurso

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

                                                                      Semelhante

                                                                      Understand other cognitive developments which occur early in life: memory and theory of mind
                                                                      Elizabeth.T.Hill
                                                                      To address the methodological challenges in studying memory in infants.
                                                                      Elizabeth.T.Hill
                                                                      Understanding theory of mind and explain why children fail theory of mind tasks
                                                                      Elizabeth.T.Hill
                                                                      Piaget Theory: Stage 1 - Sensorimotor Period = birth - 2yrs
                                                                      Elizabeth.T.Hill
                                                                      To address the methodological challenges in studying memory in infants. - created from Mind Map
                                                                      Elizabeth.T.Hill
                                                                      Understand other cognitive developments which occur early in life: memory and theory of mind - created from Mind Map
                                                                      Elizabeth.T.Hill
                                                                      Piaget's Theory: Stage 4 - Formal Operations = 11-adulthood
                                                                      Elizabeth.T.Hill
                                                                      Describe common research designs: Developmental Theorists
                                                                      Elizabeth.T.Hill
                                                                      Cognition Development
                                                                      Elizabeth.T.Hill
                                                                      Object permanence - sensorimotor period
                                                                      Elizabeth.T.Hill
                                                                      Accomplishment of SM period:
                                                                      Elizabeth.T.Hill