Lecture 10 Flashcards

1
Q

10 rules of learning

A
  1. Rate of learning
  2. Distributed practice
  3. Rote learning
  4. Importance of testing and feedback
  5. Motivation
  6. Arousal
  7. Meaningfulness
  8. Dual coding
  9. Study with a friend
  10. Levels of processing and elaborative rehearsal
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2
Q

Rate of learning

A
  • More time spent the better retention

- Law of repetition

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3
Q

Distributed practice

A
  • Revise little and often
  • Have breaks between study sessions
  • Rest and sleep needed
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4
Q

Rote learning

A

-Learning via rehearsal without thinking about deeper meanings

Study:

  • Ppts given long list of words
  • At the end had to report the last word beginning with G
  • Had to do another task = given list of words and then as a surprise told to recall all words –> found time spent in working memory doesn’t affect recall so rote learning doesn’t help learning
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5
Q

Importance of testing and feedback

A
  • Better to have a test trial than an extra learning trial
  • Because of the generation effect = better memory if you came up with answer yourself
  • Feedback necessary

Study:

  • Had to learn Somali vocabulary for repeated studies and test trials
  • Tested 1 week after learning
  • 4 groups:
  • -> 1 = tested repetivitvly and had study phase
  • -> 2 = didnt study same words they had already mastered, words would be dropped from study phase but still tested on
  • -> 3 = words in study phase but not in the test phase
  • -> 4 = when they learnt the words they were dropped from the study and test phase
  • Results = if items dropped form study and test = poor recall at end of week
  • Best recall was the group that didnt have items in the study phase but was repeatedly tested
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6
Q

Motivation study

A
  • Group 1 = no motivation for learning
  • Group 2 = no motivation during study at time of recall but there was a substantial cash prize offered for best learning but weren’t told before
  • Group 3 = cash price mentioned before learning
  • Found no difference between groups
  • External motivation prize didn’t effect learning or recall = no effect of motivation
  • Effect is indirect, it affects time and attention spent
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7
Q

Arousal

A
  • Yerkes-Dodson law

- But implicit learning doesn’t depend on arousal

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8
Q

Meaningfulness

A

-Material easier to learn if meaningful and related to what we already know

Study:

  • List of 40 words which were presented at random or in categories
  • Found they could recall more words when they were categorised
  • Based on organisation principle = memory learnt better if placed into related categorises
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9
Q

Dual coding

A
  • Give yourself different pathways to access learning
  • Verbal info is stored in symbolic verbal code
  • Visual info is represented in analogue mental image
  • Better attention if something is represented in both codes
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10
Q

Study with a friend

A
  • Explain things to each other
  • Active role
  • New insights
  • New connections
  • New retrieval paths
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11
Q

Levels or processing

A
  • Continuum between shallow and deep processing
  • Deeper processing produced elaborative, longer lasting and stronger memory traces
  • If trying to remember word pail and queue for it is starts with p = shallow processing
  • But if looking trying to work out plum and queue for it is its a type of fruit = deeper processing
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12
Q

Elaborative rehearsal

A
  • When context is elaborate its more memorable as you can make more associations
  • Based on the generation effect = actively involved in decision making, makes learning more likely
  • Also based on elaboration principle = more you can connect existing knowledge, better the memory
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13
Q

Evaluation of levels of processing

A
  • Places emphasis on memory processes rather than memory structures
  • True that elaborative processing leads to better retention
  • The patter is clear in explicit and unclear in implicit
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14
Q

General principles of retrieval

A
  • Retrieval cues

- Memory traces = connected by associations

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15
Q

4 types of context dependent memory

A
  • Environmental-dependent
  • State-dependent
  • Mood-Dependent
  • Cognitive dependent
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16
Q

Environmental dependent forgetting

A
  • Godden and Baddely
  • Deep sea divers

Criticisms:
-Only found in recall tasks not recognition

17
Q

State dependent memory

A
  • Recalled errors after drinking vodka
  • Closer context and learning and retrieval = better recall
  • Only for recall not recognition
18
Q

Mood-dependent memory

A
  • Better if learnt and recalled in congruent mood
  • Ppts either encoded in pleasant or unpleasant mood
  • Recalled in merry or melancholy music
19
Q

Cognitive context dependent memory

A
  • Cognitive context includes ideas, thoughts and convictions
  • Found bilinguals better at remembering info if tested in the same language as encoding
20
Q

Schacter’s 7 sins

A

Sins of forgetting:

  • Transience
  • Absentmindeness
  • Blocking

Sins of distortion

  • Misattribution
  • Suggestibility
  • Bias

Sins in intrusive recollection
-Persistence

21
Q

Transience

A
  • Memory for facts and evens
  • Become less accessible over time
  • Related to amount of work done during initial coding
  • Value of transience = keeps info most likely to be needed
22
Q

Absentmindedness

A

-Forgetting because if inattention during encoding or retrieval

  • Encoding
  • -> Divided attention: large interference effect = competing for same general resources
  • -> Change blindness = ppts shown pictures, picture changes but no change percieved
  • -> Office study = inferences fill in the gaps

Retrieval:

  • -> Event based prospective memory
  • -> Time based prospective memory

Value:
–> Enables us to benefit on auto pilot for routine activity

23
Q

Blocking

A
  • Info temporarily inaccessible
  • Part set cueing = disruption of ones retrieval plan and inhibition of related info
  • Tip of the tongue state
  • Value = if all info associated with retrieval cue came to mind would be confused
24
Q

Misattribution

A
  • Memory is present but attributed to wrong source
  • Source amnesia = forgetting true source of memory
  • Sleeper effect = info from an unreliable source but gains credibility because source forgotten
  • Transferences = wrong source + subjective experience of the memory
  • Cryptomnesia = wrong source + no experience of remembering
25
Q

Deese-Roediger-McDermott paradigm (misattribution)

A
  • = false recall or recognition of something that never happened
  • Ppts presented with list of words to recall e.g. bed and awake
  • Found people recalled related but non presented words e.g. sleep
26
Q

More/less false memories happen when… (misattribution)

A
  • More false memories when many associations exist, getting older and damage to frontal lobe
  • Less false memories when pictures used, word has emotional connotations and damage to medial temporal lobe
27
Q

Value of misattribution

A

-The gist is more important than details

28
Q

Suggestibility

A
  • When you accept false suggestions made by others
  • Leading questions
  • People who recall false memories also report lapses of attention and memory
  • Value = gist more important than details
29
Q

Bias

A
  • Encoding and retrieval dependent on pre-existing knowledge and belief
  • Based on schemas and stereotypes
30
Q

Persistence

A
  • Constantly remembering an event you want to forget
  • PTSD
  • Suicidal depression
  • Related to activity in amygdala
  • Value = need to recall life threatening events to stay alive