Download - Cognition Domain

Transcript
Page 1: Cognition Domain

Cognition Domain

Page 2: Cognition Domain

Memory

Page 3: Cognition Domain

Information Processing

Module 22

Page 4: Cognition Domain

Module Overview• Encoding• Storage• Retrieval

Click on the any of the above hyperlinks to go to that section in the presentation.

Page 5: Cognition Domain

Encoding

Module 22: Information Processing

Page 6: Cognition Domain

Information Processing Model

• Encoding – process of getting information into the memory system.

• Storage – The retention encoded information over time.

• Retrieval – The process of getting information out of memory storage.

Page 7: Cognition Domain

Information Processing Model

Page 8: Cognition Domain

Encoding:Automatic Processing and

Effortful Processing

Module 22: Information Processing

Page 9: Cognition Domain

Automatic Processing

• The unconscious and effortless process of encoding certain information

• such as space, time and frequency.

Page 10: Cognition Domain

Effortful Processing

• Encoding that requires attention and conscious effort.

• The best processing is through rehearsal or practice.

Page 11: Cognition Domain

Automatic/Effortful Processing

Page 12: Cognition Domain

Rehearsal

• The conscious repetition of information.

• The more time spent on rehearsal, the more information one tends to remember.

Page 13: Cognition Domain

Rehearsal and Retention

Page 14: Cognition Domain

Hermann Ebbinghaus (1850-1909)

• German philosopher who did pioneering memory studies.

• Developed the forgetting curve, also called the “retention curve” or “Ebbinghaus curve”

Page 15: Cognition Domain

Overlearning

• Continuing to rehearse even after it has been memorized

• Rehearsing past the point of mastery• Helps ensure information will be

available even under stress

Page 16: Cognition Domain

Encoding:Serial Position Effect

Module 22: Information Processing

Page 17: Cognition Domain

Serial Position Effect

• The tendency to recall the first and last items in a list more easily.

• Primacy effect – the ability to recall information near the beginning of a list

• Recency effect – the ability to recall information near the end of a list

Page 18: Cognition Domain

Primacy/Recency Effect

Page 19: Cognition Domain

Encoding:Spacing of Rehearsal

Module 22: Information Processing

Page 20: Cognition Domain

Spacing Effect

• The tendency for distributed practice to yield better retention than is achieved through massed practice

Page 21: Cognition Domain

Distributed Practice

• Spreading rehearsal out in several sessions separated by period of time

• Usually enhances the recalling of the information

Page 22: Cognition Domain

Massed Practice

• Putting all rehearsal together in one long session (cramming)

• Not as effective as distributed practice

Page 23: Cognition Domain

Encoding:Encoding Meaning

Module 22: Information Processing

Page 24: Cognition Domain

Semantic Encoding

• Encoding of meaning.• Encoding information that is meaningful

enhances recall

Page 25: Cognition Domain

Semantic Encoding

Page 26: Cognition Domain

Acoustic Encoding

• Encoding information based on the sounds of the information

Page 27: Cognition Domain

Acoustic Encoding

Page 28: Cognition Domain

Visual Encoding

• Encoding information based on the images of the information

Page 29: Cognition Domain

Visual Encoding

Page 30: Cognition Domain

Self-Reference Effect

• Enhanced semantic encoding of information that is personally relevant

• Making information meaningful to a person by making it relevant to one’s life

Page 31: Cognition Domain

Encoding:Encoding Imagery

Module 22: Information Processing

Page 32: Cognition Domain

Encoding Imagery

• Visual images easily encode• Especially extremely positive or

negative images

Page 33: Cognition Domain

Encoding:Mnemonic Devices

Module 22: Information Processing

Page 34: Cognition Domain

Mnemonic Device

• A memory trick or technique.• “Every good boy does fine” to

remember the notes on the lines of the scale

• “People say you could have odd lots of good years” as a way to remember how to spell “psychology”

Page 35: Cognition Domain

Method of Loci

• Mnemonic device in which you associate items you want to remember with imaginary places

Page 36: Cognition Domain

Peg-Word System

• Mnemonic device in which you associate items you want to remember with a list of words already you have already memorized

• Goal is to visualize the items to remember with the items on the pegs

Page 37: Cognition Domain

Peg Word System

Page 38: Cognition Domain

Encoding:Organizing Information

Module 22: Information Processing

Page 39: Cognition Domain

Chunking

• Organizing information into meaningful units.

• More information can be encoded if organized into meaningful chunks.

Page 40: Cognition Domain

Chunking

• Take ten seconds to memorize the above line of letters.

Page 41: Cognition Domain

Chunking

• Take ten seconds to memorize the above line of letters.

Page 42: Cognition Domain

Chunking

Page 43: Cognition Domain

Storage

Module 22: Information Processing

Page 44: Cognition Domain

Three Storage Systems

• Three distinct storage systems :–Sensory Memory–Short-Term Memory (includes

Working Memory)–Long-Term Memory

Page 45: Cognition Domain

Storage:Sensory Memory

Module 22: Information Processing

Page 46: Cognition Domain

Sensory Memory

• Brief, initial coding of sensory information in the memory system.–Iconic store – visual information–Echoic store – sound information

• Information held just long enough to make a decision on its importance

Page 47: Cognition Domain

Storage:Short-Term/Working

Memory

Module 22: Information Processing

Page 48: Cognition Domain

Short-Term Memory• The part of your memory system that

contains information you are conscious aware of before it is stored more permanently or forgotten.

• Holds approximately seven, plus or minus two, chunks of information

• Can retain the information as long as it is rehearsed

• Also called “working memory”

Page 49: Cognition Domain

Short-Term Memory

Page 50: Cognition Domain

Storage:Long-Term Memory

Module 22: Information Processing

Page 51: Cognition Domain

Long-Term Memory

• The relatively permanent and limitless storehouse of the memory system.

• Holds memories without conscious effort

Page 52: Cognition Domain

Flashbulb Memory

• A vivid, clear memory of an emotionally significant moment or event.

• Can be personal memories or centered around a shared event

Page 53: Cognition Domain

Storage:Memory and the Brain

Module 22: Information Processing

Page 54: Cognition Domain

Long-Term Potentiation

• An increase in a synapse’s firing efficiency that occurs when the sequence of neurons that represents a particular memory fires repeatedly;

• believed to be the neural basis of learning and memory

Page 55: Cognition Domain

Storage:Explicit and Implicit

Memories

Module 22: Information Processing

Page 56: Cognition Domain

Explicit Memory

• The memory of facts and experiences.• Processed through the hippocampus

Page 57: Cognition Domain

Explicit Memories

Page 58: Cognition Domain

Explicit Memories

Page 59: Cognition Domain

Implicit Memory

• The memory of skills and procedures.• Processed through the cerebellum

Page 60: Cognition Domain

Implicit Memories

Page 61: Cognition Domain

Implicit Memories

Page 62: Cognition Domain

Memory and the Hippocampus

• Damage to the hippocampus would result in the inability to form new explicit memories, but the ability to remember the skills of implicit memories

Page 63: Cognition Domain

Memory and the Hippocampus

Page 64: Cognition Domain

Retrieval

Module 22: Information Processing

Page 65: Cognition Domain

Retrieval

• The process of getting information out of memory storage

• Two forms of retrieval–Recall–Recognition

Page 66: Cognition Domain

Recall

• The type of retrieval in which you must search for information that you previously stored as on a fill-in-the-blank test.

Page 67: Cognition Domain

Recognition

• The type of retrieval in which you must identify items you learned earlier, as on a multiple choice test.

Page 68: Cognition Domain

Retrieval

Page 69: Cognition Domain

Retrieval:Context

Module 22: Information Processing

Page 70: Cognition Domain

Context Effect

• The enhanced ability to retrieve information when you are in an environment similar to the one in which you encoded the information.

Page 71: Cognition Domain

Context Effect

Page 72: Cognition Domain

Retrieval:State Dependency

Module 22: Information Processing

Page 73: Cognition Domain

State Dependent Memory

• The enhanced ability to retrieve information when you are in the same physical and emotional state you were in when you encoded the information.

• The retrieval state is congruent with the encoding state

Page 74: Cognition Domain

The End


Top Related