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Ψ Cognitive Psychology Winter 2004 -Discussion Section-
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Cognitive Psychology Winter 2004 -Discussion Section-

Jan 02, 2016

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Magnus Walters
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Page 1: Cognitive Psychology Winter 2004 -Discussion Section-

ΨΨCognitive Psychology

Winter 2004

-Discussion Section-

Page 2: Cognitive Psychology Winter 2004 -Discussion Section-

Memory

III. Memory for general

knowledge

Page 3: Cognitive Psychology Winter 2004 -Discussion Section-

Cognitive functions• Perception

• Memory• Attention

• Decision-making• Reasoning, problem-solving

• Imagery

• Language

Emotion

Motivation

Action• Memory

Page 4: Cognitive Psychology Winter 2004 -Discussion Section-

Overview

•Memory for general knowledge.

•Nickerson & Adams paper

•Review for midterm (except categorization).

•(Briefly): 7 sins of memory review

Page 5: Cognitive Psychology Winter 2004 -Discussion Section-

Take home from seven sins:

•Transience

•Absentmindedness

•Blocking

•Misattribution

•Suggestibility

•Bias

•Persistence

A central paper. You should be able to:

•Name them

•Explain what they are

•Know empirical evidence of their reality

•Explain the adaptive system they derive from.

Page 6: Cognitive Psychology Winter 2004 -Discussion Section-

Memory for general knowledge

•Basic distinction: Episodic vs. Semantic.

Endel Tulving

•Many differences

•Intuitively clear:

State, Chicago?

Ate, Breakfast?

Knowing Facts, „Knowledge“

Recall of Personal experiences

Repetition with invariant core

Page 7: Cognitive Psychology Winter 2004 -Discussion Section-

Memory for general knowledge•Semantic memory models:

•Hierarchical model

•Feature comparison model

•ACT model

•Episodic memory models: ?

•Schemata

•Scripts

•Connectionist models, neural networks

Networks, Feature lists, etc.

Very 70´s and 80´s style. Inspired by Computer science

90s, Neuroscience inspired

Page 8: Cognitive Psychology Winter 2004 -Discussion Section-

Memory for general knowledge•Hierarchical model

•Feature comparison model

Semantic network Hierarchical

-Spread of activation

-Nodes

-Semantic priming

-RT based studies

-Typicality

•Memory as a linked feature list

•Every concept consists of a set of elements (features)

•There are defining and characteristic features

•The more defining features, the easier. Explains category size effect (abstractness)

Page 9: Cognitive Psychology Winter 2004 -Discussion Section-

Memory for general knowledge

•ACT theory

John Anderson

•A central psychological theory

•Combines working memory, declarative and procedural memory.

•Nodes, Production rules

•Conditions, actions

•Activated production rules create nodes

Page 10: Cognitive Psychology Winter 2004 -Discussion Section-

Memory for general knowledge

•Scripts

•Schemata•Organized information

•Contain fixed slots and variable content

•Questionnaire (template) model of memory

•Default values

•Schema for routine events

•Restaurant example

•Allows inferences, leaving things unsaid. Problem: Intrusions.

Page 11: Cognitive Psychology Winter 2004 -Discussion Section-

Memory for general knowledge•Connectionist models

•Parallel processing

•Learning (unobserved)

•Layers (Input, Processing, Output)

•Nodes and Links

•Weights

•Increasingly popular, powerful

•Hard do damage, robust plausible

James McClelland

Page 12: Cognitive Psychology Winter 2004 -Discussion Section-

Nickerson & Adams

Page 13: Cognitive Psychology Winter 2004 -Discussion Section-

Nickerson & Adams

1 c

Page 14: Cognitive Psychology Winter 2004 -Discussion Section-

Nickerson & Adams1 $ ?

Page 15: Cognitive Psychology Winter 2004 -Discussion Section-

Nickerson & Adams

•Basic points:•Familiarity does not guarantee retention.•Even if there were literally thousands of presentations of the information.•Crucial are importance, which generally leads to the deployment of attention.•In the absence of these, memory is poor.•People are not necessarily aware of this. Introspection is a bad measure of memory for everyday objects.

Page 16: Cognitive Psychology Winter 2004 -Discussion Section-

Nickerson & Adams

Study tip: Try to think that the course material is important and pay attention. Try to care. That way, memory will naturally be much better than if you just read/hear the stuff.

Page 17: Cognitive Psychology Winter 2004 -Discussion Section-

Review for midterm:•2nd midterm is on next Wednesday, as scheduled

•Topics are basically Memory and Categorization

•No cheating!

•Try to study on the weekend. Email me for questions

•QALMRI: As usual, thu night. But it helps to understand Classification.

•Material from Lecture, Book, Discussion section and papers. Look online for my slides. •No screwed up questions this time. (I hope)

•Don´t panic, it could be worse.

Page 18: Cognitive Psychology Winter 2004 -Discussion Section-

Concepts to know•Interference:

Proactive vs. Retroactive

1 2 1 2

•Explicitness:

Explicit vs. Implicit

Bla

Page 19: Cognitive Psychology Winter 2004 -Discussion Section-

Concepts to know

•Encoding specificity

•Modal model of memory:

Sensory memory Short term memory Long term memory

Information Response

Storage

Retrieval

-Context effect

-State dependent learning

-Cues!

Page 20: Cognitive Psychology Winter 2004 -Discussion Section-

Concepts to know•Working memory = structured STM

Phonological loop

Visuospatial

sketchpad

Central executive

LTM

Declarative Procedural

Episodic Semantic

•Memory structure

Implicit

ExplicitKnowingVivid Recall

Knowing that... Knowing how to...

Page 21: Cognitive Psychology Winter 2004 -Discussion Section-

Concepts to know•Basic functions of memory

Encoding

Storage

Retrieval

•Sins of memory7

Page 22: Cognitive Psychology Winter 2004 -Discussion Section-

Topics to know

Page 23: Cognitive Psychology Winter 2004 -Discussion Section-

Short term memory

Coding, Capacity, Retention duration, etc.

Serial position effects (primacy, recency, use).

Mnemonic strategies: Chunking, rehearsal.

Working memory

Inferference (Proactive, retroactive)

Memory search (serial, exhaustive)

Page 24: Cognitive Psychology Winter 2004 -Discussion Section-

Long term memory

Coding, Capacity, Retention duration, etc.

Levels of processing theory

Forgetting: Decay, Interference, Overwriting

Encoding specificity: State-dependent learning, Context effects, spacing, cues, mood dependent learning.

Page 25: Cognitive Psychology Winter 2004 -Discussion Section-

Autobiographical memory

-Flashbulb memory (Vivid, yet not more accurate)

-Eyewitness testimony (Constructive, Post hoc)

-Repressed memories (Controversial, doubtful)

-Amnesia (Symptoms)

Page 26: Cognitive Psychology Winter 2004 -Discussion Section-

Memory for general knowledge•Dichotomies:

Implicit vs. Explicit memory

Declarative vs. Procedural memory

Semantic vs. Episodic memory

•Models:

Hierarchical model

ACT model

Connectionist model

Feature comparison model

Scripts

Schemata

Network models

Highly inspired by Computer Science, Linguistics