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Memory
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Memory

Feb 24, 2016

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Memory. Atkinson and Shiffrin , (1968) classic model of memory. Baddeley , (1992) ‘modern’ model of memory. Ebbinhaus ’ retention curve. GOV, NUV, LOM, KEL. Serial Position Effect. Primacy Effect Recency Effect Next-in-line Effect. Encoding. Mnemonics. Peg word Method of loci - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Memory

Memory

Page 2: Memory

Atkinson and Shiffrin, (1968) classic model of memory

Page 3: Memory

Baddeley, (1992) ‘modern’ model of memory

Page 4: Memory

Ebbinhaus’ retention curve

GOV, NUV, LOM, KEL

Page 5: Memory

Serial Position Effect

Primacy Effect

Recency Effect

Next-in-line Effect

Page 6: Memory

Encoding

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MnemonicsPeg wordMethod of lociChunking

1776, 1812, 1861, 1898, 1917, 1941, 1950, 1963, 1991

Page 8: Memory

Storage: Sensory Memory

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Short-Term/Working MemoryOn the next slides you will see a

series of numbers. I will also say the numbers out loud. After I say the last number, the numbers will disappear.

Silently, write the numbers, in the exact order, on your paper.

Page 10: Memory

2831

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74139

Page 12: Memory

497215

Page 13: Memory

5183926

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16953472

Page 15: Memory

362514798

Page 16: Memory

6154983287

Page 17: Memory

89316427513

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STM – The Magic #7 +/- 2• Short-Term Memory – memory that

holds onto about seven sensory inputs for about twenty seconds

• An experiment in STM:• Look at each of the following words –

one at a time – for ONLY two seconds. Silently repeat the word as I say it out loud.• When we have gone through all 15

words, then try to reproduce the words, in the correct order, on the piece of paper.

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Peach

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Book

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Sword

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Car

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Enemy

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Mirror

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Shoe

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Thermometer

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Clock

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Brick

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Bed

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Salt

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Flower

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Calendar

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Airplane

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Reproduce the list of words in the correct order

1. Peach2. Book3. Sword4. Car5. Enemy6. Mirror7. Shoe8. Thermometer9. Clock10. Brick11. Bed12. Salt13. Flower14. Calendar15. Airplane

Page 35: Memory

Long-Term Memory

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A Quick Exercise in LTMAnswer the following questions about

everyday things that should be in your LTM

1. Whose portrait is on the ten dollar bill?2. What two letters do not appear on a

standard land phone?3. What is the color of the top stripe of the

American flag? 4. The bottom stripe? 5. How many red and how many white

stripes does the flag have?

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Feature SensoryMemory

Working Memory LTM

Encoding Copy Phonemic Semantic

Capacity Unlimited 7±2 Chunks Very Large

Duration 0.25 sec. 20 sec. Years

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Page 39: Memory

RetrievalRecall vs. Recognition, Part 1

◦Write down the number of any word that you believe is misspelled.

1. Acomplishment2. Acheivement3. Consolidate4. Consistant5. Reccommend6. Maintainance

Write out the word with the correct spelling.

Page 40: Memory

Recall vs. Recognition, Part 1I

1. Accomplishment2. Achievement3. Consolidate4. Consistent5. Recommend6. Maintenance

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More recall vs. recognitionOn the sheet of paper, write

down as many of the names of the seven dwarfs from the Disney version of Snow White and the 7 Dwarfs.

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Snow White and the 7 DwarfsSniffy Ziggy Happy

Skippy

Dopey Stumbly DocGiggly

Scooby GrumpyStubby Goofy

Bashful ScrappySleepy Snoozy

Bossy SneezyWheezy Giggles

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Watch and listen carefully . . .

G X C O T R L M B W Q

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Silently, begin counting backwards by threes from 100 until I tell you to stop.

100 . . . 97 . . . 94 . . .

• G X C O T R L M B W Q

Page 45: Memory

Proactive or Retroactive Interference?

Proactive – (forward-acting) the disruptive effect of prior learning on the recall of new information

Retroactive – (backward-acting) the disruptive effect of new learning on the recall of old information

Page 46: Memory