Chapter 4 Memory
Chapter 4 Memory
Chapter 4 Memory
•Structural Encoding focuses on what words look like. For instance, one might note whether
words are long or short, in uppercase or lowercase, or handwritten or typed.
•Phonemic Encoding focuses on how words sound.
•Semantic Encoding focuses on the meaning of words. Semantic encoding requires a deeper level
of processing than structural or phonemic encoding and usually results in better memory.
Storage
After information enters the brain, it has to be stored or maintained. To describe the process of
storage, many psychologists use the three-stage model proposed by Richard
Atkinson and Richard Shiffrin. According to this model, information is stored sequentially in
three memory systems: sensory memory, short-term memory, and long-term memory
Sensory Memory
Sensory Memory stores incoming sensory information in detail but only for an instant.
The capacity of sensory memory is very large, but the information in it is unprocessed. If a
flashlight moves quickly in a circle inside a dark room, people will see a circle of light
rather than the individual points through which the flashlight moved. This happens because
sensory memory holds the successive images of the moving flashlight long enough for the
brain to see a circle. Visual sensory memory is called Iconic Memory; auditory sensory
memory is called Echoic Memory.
Short-Term Memory
Some of the information in sensory memory transfers to Short-Term Memory, which can hold
information for approximately twenty seconds. Rehearsing can help keep information in short-
term memory longer. When people repeat a new phone number over and over to themselves, they
are rehearsing it and keeping it in short-term memory.
Short-term memory has a limited capacity: it can store about seven pieces of information,
plus or minus two pieces. A method called chunking can help to increase the capacity of
short-term memory. Chunking combines small bits of information into bigger, familiar
pieces.
Long-Term Memory
Information can be transferred from short-term memory to long-term memory and from long-
term memory back to short-term memory. Long-Term Memory has an almost infinite capacity,
and information in long-term memory usually stays there for the duration of a person’s life.
However, this doesn’t mean that people will always be able to remember what’s in their long-
term memory—they may not be able to retrieve information that’s there.
Retrieval
Retrieval is the process of getting information out of memory. Retrieval Cues are stimuli
that help the process of retrieval. Retrieval cues include associations, context, and mood.
Lost Memories
The fact that people can often recall lost memories when hypnotized suggests that
information in long-term memory is usually not lost— it may just be difficult to retrieve.
Associations
Because the brain stores information as networks of associated concepts, recalling a
particular word becomes easier if another, related word is recalled first. This process is
called Priming.
Example: If Tim shows his roommate a picture of sunbathers on a nude beach and then asks
him to spell the word bear, the roommate may be more likely to spell bare because the
picture primed him to recall that form of the word.
Context
People can often remember an event by placing themselves in the same context they were in
when the event happened.
Example: If a woman loses her car keys, she may be able to recall where she put them if she re-
creates in her mind exactly what she did when she last came in from parking her car.
Mood
If people are in the same mood they were in during an event, they may have an easier time
recalling the event.
There are three ways you can retrieve information out of your long-term memory storage system: recall,
recognition, and relearning.
Recall is what we most often think about when we talk about memory retrieval: it means you can access
information without cues. For example, you would use recall for an essay test.
Recognition happens when you identify information that you have previously learned after encountering it
again. It involves a process of comparison. When you take a multiple-choice test, you are relying on
recognition to help you choose the correct answer. Here is another example. Let’s say you graduated from
high school 10 years ago, and you have returned to your hometown for your 10-year reunion. You may not be
able to recall all of your classmates, but you recognize many of them based on their yearbook photos.
The third form of retrieval is relearning, and it’s just what it sounds like. It involves learning
information that you previously learned. Whitney took Spanish in high school, but after high
school she did not have the opportunity to speak Spanish. Whitney is now 31, and her company
has offered her an opportunity to work in their Mexico City office. In order to prepare herself,
she enrolls in a Spanish course at the local community center. She’s surprised at how quickly
she’s able to pick up the language after not speaking it for 13 years; this is an example of
relearning.
Forgetting:
• The forgetting curve hypothesizes the decline of memory retention
over time.
• This curve shows how information is lost over time when there is no
attempt to retain it.
In 1885, German psychologist Hermann Ebbinghaus hypothesized that the rate of forgetting is
exponential. Using himself as the sole subject in his experiment, he memorized lists of three letter
nonsense syllable words—two consonants and one vowel in the middle. He then measured his own
capacity to relearn a given list of words after a variety of given time period. He found that forgetting
occurs in a systematic manner, beginning rapidly and then leveling off, represented graphically in the
Ebbinghaus forgetting curve. From this research Ebbinghaus concluded that much of what we forget is
lost soon after it is originally learned, but that the amount of forgetting eventually levels off.
Types of Memory
Psychologists often make distinctions among different types of
memory. There are three main distinctions:
1.Implicit vs. explicit memory
2.Declarative vs. procedural memory
3.Semantic vs. episodic memory
Implicit vs. Explicit Memory
Sometimes information that unconsciously enters the memory affects thoughts and behavior,
even though the event and the memory of the event remain unknown. Such unconscious retention
of information is called Implicit Memory.
Example: Hina once visited Hotel California with her parents when she was ten years old. She
may not remember ever having been there, but when she makes a trip there later, she knows
exactly how to get to the swimming pool.
Explicit Memory is conscious, intentional remembering of information. Remembering a social security
number involves explicit memory.
Declarative vs. Procedural Memory
Declarative Memory is recall of factual information such as dates, words, faces, events, and concepts.
Remembering the capital of France, the rules for playing football, and what happened in the last game of
the World Series involves declarative memory. Declarative memory is usually considered to be explicit
because it involves conscious, intentional remembering.
Procedural Memory is recall of how to do things such as swimming or driving a car. Procedural memory
is usually considered implicit because people don’t have to consciously remember how to perform actions
or skills.
Semantic vs. Episodic Memory
Declarative memory is of two types: semantic and episodic. Semantic Memory is recall of general facts,
while Episodic Memory is recall of personal facts. Remembering the capital of France and the rules for
playing football uses semantic memory. Remembering what happened in the last game of the World Series
uses episodic memory.