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Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person that any info from past is accessed explicit memory: conscious access to info from past (“I remember that..” ) -> involves conscious recollection -> term generally used synonymously with episodic memory
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Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

Jan 11, 2016

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Page 1: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions

• implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person that any info from past is accessed

• explicit memory:conscious access to info from past (“I remember that..” )

-> involves conscious recollection -> term generally used synonymously with episodic memory

Page 2: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

• concept evolved out of neuropsychological research in patients suffering from amnesia; later studied in cognitive psychology, social psychology, developmental psychology etc.

• first systematic study in densely amnesic patient H.M. (Brenda Milner, 1960s, in Montreal)

• H.M.:

in 1953, bilateral surgical removal of medial temporal-lobes to stop his epileptic seizures, which couldn’t be treated with medication

Implicit memory:What studies in amnesia have told us

Page 3: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

Is normal implicit memory limited to motor learning in amnesia? No!

• Warrington & Weiskrantz (1970) demonstrate that amnesic patients show preserved implicit memory on list learning with word stem completion task

• Study: table, garden, telephone, lamp, umbrella etc.

Test: - Free Recall- Yes/No recognition- Word stem completion: tab____?

gar____?(Instructions: think of any word that fits stem)

• Finding: amnesic patients show memory deficits on first 2 tests but normal performance on word stem completion

Page 4: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

-> normal performance of patients on completion task but impaired cued recall and free recall -> type of access (implicit vs explicit) to stored info critical

Repetition priming in amnesia: Lack of retrieval intentionality is

important

Page 5: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

Can repetition priming also be shown to be different from explicit memory in normal

subjects? • Tulving, Schacter, & Stark (1982):

fragment completion task

study: incidental learning with semantic decisions; judge words in terms of animacy

(e.g. twilight, assassin, dinosaur, mystery)

test: complete fragments with first word that comes to mindch_ _nko_t__us

_ssa__in

repetition priming: more completions of studied than non-studied words

Page 6: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

Repetition priming in normal subjects

• Tulving, Schacter, & Stark (1982):

+ repetition priming effects long-lasting (no ‘forgetting’ over a week or more)

+ by contrast, recognition memory for previously studied words shows some forgetting

->> even in normals implicit memory can be distinguished from

explicit/episodic memory

Page 7: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

• informal (unethical!) observation with ‘mock crisis’ in 1960s:faked crisis during surgery causes subsequent agitation in patients recovering from surgery, without their knowing why

• systematic (ethical!) studies show that encoding under anesthesia produces repetition priming when patients are tested after surgery on word-fragment completion task

-> no allocation of attention required at encoding

Does repetition priming require attention at time of encoding?

Page 8: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

Is repetition priming linked to semantic memory?

Does it benefit from semantic encoding ?(LoP study; Graf & Mandler)

study:- semantic decisions (animate /inanimate)- physical decisions(# of capital letters)

test:- cued recall- fragment completionFinding: no LoP effect on completion task -> not likely that semantic memory involved

Page 9: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

Is repetition priming a perceptual type of memory?

two important findings:

• reductions in repetition priming effects with

+ changes in modality between study and test(e.g. encoding of words in auditory modality

word-fragment completion test in visual modality)

+ changes in perceptual characteristics of words between study and test (e.g. font, uppercase/lowercase)…

-> suggests that priming reflects a perceptual type of memory; fits with finding of no LoP effect

best term to capture phenomenon: perceptual priming

Page 10: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

If it is perceptual, can priming be observed in other sensory modalities?

• yes; evidence for perceptual priming on auditory word-stem completion task (after incidental encoding in auditory modality)

-> priming not limited to visual modality

Page 11: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

Can perceptual priming be observed with non-verbal stimuli?

• experiments with possible and impossible objects by Schacter & Cooper (early 90s)

Study: judge whether object faces left or right

Test: object decision task with 100 ms exposurewith studied and non-studied objects

Finding: more accurate performance with previously studied objects (priming)

Page 12: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

• Schacter & Cooper (early 90s)

comparison of encoding effects for recognition memory (explicit) and perceptual priming on object decision task (implicit)

+ physical vs semantic judgements at encoding (left-right facing vs what real object does it remind

you of)

-> semantic encoding only improves recognition

-> finding suggests that priming perceptual in nature

Is perceptual priming on object decision task an expression of semantic memory?

Page 13: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

Interpretation of perceptual priming: Perceptual representation systems (PRS)

• theory proposed by Schacter & Tulving:

+ perceptual representation systems: not dedicated memory systems but

perceptual systems that keep memory as by-product of perceptual analysis

analogy: hot-tube effect with stove

+ memory representations in PRS operate implicitly

(no conscious recollection possible)

Page 14: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

• Schacter & Tulving:

visual representation system for words -> representation: visual word forms

visual representation system for objects-> representation: structural descriptions of

objects

auditory representation for words-> representation: auditory word forms

(phonology)

perceptual representation systems rely on brain structures that perform perceptual analyses

e.g. visual representation systems localized in visual cortex

Interpretation of perceptual priming: Perceptual representation systems (PRS)

Page 15: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

Functional neuroimaging evidence for perceptual priming in PRS: reductions in brain

activation

C: unprimed objectsD: primed objects

activity reductions in visual cortex for primed objects

effect at behavioural level:

priming = facilitated performance

Page 16: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

• typical set-up of priming study

study: incidental encoding of word list (table, garden, telephone,

umbrella etc.)

priming test: word stem completion complete word stem with first

word that comes to mindrea___??gar___??net___??

Problems for studying perceptual priming as type of implicit memory

Page 17: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

Problems for studying perceptual priming as type of implicit memory

• does performance on priming task always reflect implicit memory?

no! -> problem of ‘explicit contamination’

e.g. subjects may rely on conscious recollection to perform stem completion task even when no explicit memory instructions are given

-> presumed implicit memory task may not always measure concept of implicit memory

• L. Jacoby’s approach to purify measures of implicit memory:

process dissociation procedure (method of opposition)

Page 18: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

Process dissociation procedure to purify measures of implicit memory

• experiment by Jacoby et al. with word-stem completion task

Study: incidental encoding of words under full or divided attention

Test: word-stem completion task under Inclusion or Exclusion instructions

Jacoby’s terminology: implicit memory = automaticityexplicit memory = recollection

Page 19: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

Process dissociation procedure• inclusion condition:

try to generate a word that begins with stem; simply take first word that comes to mind; you can take one presented earlier-> implicit and explicit memory work in same direction

• exclusion condition:

try to complete stem but avoid completions of words presented earlier-> implicit and explicit memory work in opposite direction

Inclusion = e + i (1 - e) -> formula allow to get Exclusion = i (1- e) purified estimates for implicit (i) and explicite = Inclusion – Exclusion (e) memory contributions

i = Exclusion/(1-R)

Page 20: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

finding:

attention only affects estimates of explicit not of implicit memory

-> procedure offers powerful way to study implicit and explicit memory processes separately

Process dissociation procedure

explicit implicit

Page 21: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

Types of implicit memory other than perceptual priming

• motor skill learning (e.g. mirror drawing task)

+ normal in amnesic patient H.M.

-> does not rely on medial temporal lobe structure

+ patients with Huntington’s disease (neurological disease of motor system; brain damage in basal ganglia) show impaired motor skill learning but normal perceptual priming

-> does not rely on PRS either-> type of implicit memory that is different

from perceptual priming

Page 22: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

• can be shown with category instance generation task

study: incidental encoding of words (e.g., cycle, tree, mail, elephant, tulip etc.)

test: name as many members of the following category in 1 min

e.g., flowers - ?? (note: no perceptual cue from study phase)

priming effect: previously studied category members more likely generated than others

• conceptual priming typically normal in amnesic patients

Types of implicit memory other than perceptual priming: Conceptual priming

Page 23: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

• is conceptual priming different from perceptual priming?

yes!!

+ it benefits from semantic encoding (LoP effect)

+ not affected by switch in perceptual modality between study and test

+ dissociation in patients with Alzheimer’s disease:

normal perceptual priming but impaired conceptual priming

-> suggests that they rely on different brain structures

-> conceptual priming not based on PRS; instead builds on semantic memory

Types of implicit memory other than perceptual priming

Page 24: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

Are they really different types of implicit memory?

• perceptual priming

• conceptual priming

• motor skill learning

-> research suggests that each of them relies on different brain structures and has different

functional characteristics (e.g. modality, LoP effect, forgetting curve)

BUT commonality:implicit access to information from past -> unconscious form of memory!!

Page 25: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

Does implicit memory occur in everyday life?

• yes, most certainlyBUT difficult to grasp given its unconscious

nature

• applied research shows:+mere exposure to advertisements influences

subsequent affective judgments of these ads (attitudes), although subjects don’t

remember seeing them (Perfect & Askew, 1994)

• Schacter’s examples:

+ unintentional plagiarism (conceptual priming?)

e.g. George Harrison’s ‘My sweet lord’

+ motor skills, e.g. in sports and music

Page 26: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

Amnesia / Amnesic Syndrome:selective LTM impairments caused by

neurological condition

time

anterogradeamnesia

retrogradeamnesia

recentpast

remotepast

onsetof neurologicalcondition

Page 27: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

Neurological conditions that can produce amnesia

• temporal lobe resection (neurosurgery)• traumatic closed head injury (massive blow to head)• herpes simplex encephalitis (viral infection)• ischemia (vascular problem; interruption of blood flow to

brain)• stroke, ruptured aneurysm (bleeding from blood vessel)• Korsakoff’s syndrome (Vitamin B1 deficiency)• Alzheimer’s disease (type of dementia)

Milder, more limited memory impairments also with:• epilepsy (brain seizures)• brain tumors• chronic alcoholism

Page 28: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

Neuroanatomical basis of anterograde amnesia: Where is brain damage typically

localized?

Page 29: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

Selective memory impairments of H.M. and other patients suffering from

anterograde amnesia

• in neuropsychological testing:

+ normal IQ+ normal perceptual and language functions+ severe deficits on episodic memory tasks; not specific to particular info / material:

e.g. problems with- learning of word lists

- recognition of faces and other non- verbal info (scenes, houses etc.)

Page 30: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

• general findings in amnesic patients:

+ normal STM capacity on digit-span task + normal forgetting curve on Brown-Peterson task

+ normal recency effect in serial position curve

How can anterograde amnesia be explained?

What is the nature of the memory impairment?

Page 31: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

Additional evidence showing that memory deficit is specific to LTM in amnesic patients:

lists larger than STM span extremely difficult to learn for patients (Drachman & Arbit, 1966)

Page 32: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

How can anterograde amnesia be explained?

What is the nature of the memory impairment?

• STM / WM intact-> problem in long-term memory (LTM)

but does it affect all aspects of LTM?

Page 33: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

• mirror tracing task: builds on procedural memory for skills

• improvement in tracing performance with practice but no recollection of previous training sessions (i.e. episodes)

-> suggests that H.M. retains some info over long-term and can access it implicitly

Motor-skill learning: a type of implicit memory that is normal in H.M.

Page 34: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

-> normal performance of patients on completion task but impaired cued recall and free recall -> type of access (implicit vs explicit) to stored info critical

Normal perceptual priming on word-stem completion task in anterograde amnesia

Page 35: Implicit versus explicit memory: Definitions implicit memory: past experiences influence perceptions, thoughts and actions without awareness of person.

How can anterograde amnesia be explained?

What is the nature of the memory impairment?

• STM / WM intact-> problem in long-term memory (LTM)

• implicit memory intact+ perceptual priming + conceptual priming+ motor-skill learning procedural memory

(learning how to)

-> problem in explicit memory (consciously processed info in LTM)