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Myers EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY (6th Edition in Modules) Module 22 Forgetting, Memory Construction, and Improving Memory James A. McCubbin, PhD Clemson University Worth Publishers
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Myers EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY (6th Edition in Modules)

Dec 31, 2015

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Myers EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY (6th Edition in Modules). Module 22 Forgetting, Memory Construction, and Improving Memory James A. McCubbin, PhD Clemson University Worth Publishers. Attention. External events. Sensory memory. Short- term memory. Long- term memory. Encoding. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Myers  EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY   (6th Edition in Modules)

Myers EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY (6th Edition in Modules)

Module 22

Forgetting, Memory Construction, and Improving Memory

James A. McCubbin, PhDClemson University

Worth Publishers

Page 2: Myers  EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY   (6th Edition in Modules)

Forgetting

Forgetting as encoding failure Information never enters long-term

memory

Externalevents

Sensorymemory

Short-term

memory

Long-term

memory

Attention

Encoding

Encoding

Encodingfailure leadsto forgetting

Page 3: Myers  EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY   (6th Edition in Modules)

Forgetting

Ebbinghaus forgetting curve over 30 days-- initially rapid, then levels off with time

12345 10 15 20 25 30

10

20

30

40

50

60

0

Time in days since learning list

Percentage oflist retainedwhen relearning

Page 4: Myers  EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY   (6th Edition in Modules)

Forgetting

The forgetting curve for Spanish learned in school

Retentiondrops,

then levels off

1 3 5 9½ 14½ 25 35½ 49½Time in years after completion of Spanish course

100%

90

80

70

60

50

40

30

20

10

0

Percentage oforiginal

vocabularyretained

Page 5: Myers  EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY   (6th Edition in Modules)

Retrieval Forgetting can result from failure to

retrieve information from long-term memory

Externalevents

Attention

Encoding

Encoding

Retrieval failureleads to forgetting

Retrieval

Sensorymemory

Short-termmemory

Long-termmemory

Page 6: Myers  EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY   (6th Edition in Modules)

Forgetting as Interference

Learning some items may disrupt retrieval of other information Proactive (forward acting)

Interference disruptive effect of prior learning on

recall of new information Retroactive (backwards acting)

Interference disruptive effect of new learning on

recall of old information

Page 7: Myers  EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY   (6th Edition in Modules)

Forgetting as Interference

Page 8: Myers  EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY   (6th Edition in Modules)

Forgetting

Retroactive Interference

Without interferingevents, recall isbetter

After sleep

After remaining awake

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8Hours elapsed after learning syllables

90%

80

70

60

50

40

30

20

10

0

Percentageof syllables

recalled

Page 9: Myers  EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY   (6th Edition in Modules)

Forgetting

Forgetting can occur at any memory stage

As we process information, we filter, alter, or lose much of it

Page 10: Myers  EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY   (6th Edition in Modules)

Forgetting: Interference

Motivated Forgetting people unknowingly revise

memories Repression

defense mechanism that banishes from consciousness anxiety-arousing thoughts, feelings, and memories

Page 11: Myers  EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY   (6th Edition in Modules)

Memory Construction

We filter information and fill in missing pieces

Misinformation Effect incorporating misleading information

into one's memory of an event Source Amnesia

attributing to the wrong source an event that we experienced, heard about, read about, or imagined (misattribution)

Page 12: Myers  EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY   (6th Edition in Modules)

Memory Construction

Eyewitnesses reconstruct memories when questioned

Depiction of actual accident

Leading question:“About how fast were the carsgoing when they smashed intoeach other?”

Memoryconstruction

Page 13: Myers  EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY   (6th Edition in Modules)

Memory Construction

Most people can agree on the following: Injustice happens Incest happens Forgetting happens Recovered memories are commonplace Memories recovered under hypnosis or

drugs are especially unreliable Memories of things happening before age 3

are unreliable Memories, whether false or real, are

upsetting

Page 14: Myers  EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY   (6th Edition in Modules)

Improve Your Memory

Study repeatedly to boost recall Spend more time rehearsing or

actively thinking about the material Make material personally

meaningful Use mnemonic devices

associate with peg words--something already stored

make up story chunk--acronyms

Page 15: Myers  EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY   (6th Edition in Modules)

Improve Your Memory

Activate retrieval cues--mentally recreate situation and mood

Recall events while they are fresh-- before you encounter misinformation

Minimize interference Test your own knowledge

rehearse determine what you do not yet

know