Information Processing
Encoding - getting the information in
Storage - keeping the info
Retrieval - getting the info out
Two Track Memory System
Implicit memories (nondeclarative - automatic processing)
Ex. How to ride a bike
Explicit memories - facts and experiences we consciously declare
Semantic - facts and general knowledge
Remembering the capital of Georgia
Episodic - experienced events (personal)
First time doing something
Encoding (Building Memories)
Sensory memory: iconic, echoic
Echoic: lasts longer
Working memory (short-term)
7 plus or minus 2 pieces of information
5-9
Chunking
TVFBIJFKCIA or TV-FBI-JFK-CIA
Mnemonics
Spacing effect: distributing practice
Testing effect (p. 200): practicing retrieval of information than to merely re-read
Elaborative Rehearsal - make new information meaningful
Eschew - avoid…relate to shoo-ing away
Storage - capacity for storing long-term memories has no real limits
Explicit – hippocampus
Implicit – cerebellum and basal ganglia
Emotion-related memory formation – amygdala
Retrieval - Getting Information Out
Recall vs. Recognition
Retrieval cues
Serial position effect - primacy, regency
Primacy: first thing is what we remember
Ex. first impression of someone
Regency: Last thing is what we remember
Ex. the last thing you read on a study sheet
Forgetting - Encoding failure, storage decay, retrieval failure – interference
Memory Construction Errors (check pg. 197)
Misinformation Effects
Children’s eyewitness recall
Can memories of childhood abuse be repressed and then recovered?
Improving Memory
Organize material
Mnemonics
(refer to “eschew)
Method of Loci
Using imagery to remember something
Distributed Practice
Testing Effect
Overlearning