Memory and Language-Lecture 5 Flashcards

1
Q

Everyday Memory

A
  • content usually more important than accuracy

- often memories of memories

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2
Q

Infantile Amnesia

A
  • Almost total lack of memories from first 3 years of life

- adult amnesia for events that happened easrly in life

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3
Q

Possible explanations for Infantile amnesia

A
  1. Freud-repression
  2. Neurological (brain still developing)
  3. Schema organisation
  4. Language development
  5. Emergent self
  6. Multi-component
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4
Q

Semantic memory in infants

A

-3 month olds have some basic level distinction (can tell difference between cat and dog)

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5
Q

Episodic memory in infants

A
  • 2 month olds have retention for 2 days

- 3 month olds have retention for 7 days

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6
Q

Autobiographical memory Reminiscence bump

A

lots of memories form age 15-25 due to

  • cognitive peak (neurological view)
  • this is the time for important decisions (Identity formation view)
  • Primacy effect-early in life, not a lot of other memories (Cognitive view)
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7
Q

Accuracy of Autobiographical memory

A
  • truthful to the gist of the actual experience, not completely accurate
  • We tend to place ourselves at the center of the action
  • Tendency to cretae a coherent and largely favorable view of present self
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8
Q

Flashbulb memories

A

Highly detailed and vivid memories for surprising events that are relatively resistant to forgetting (ex. 9/11)

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9
Q

Factor that affect eyewitness memory

A

-Perceptual stage (dark, distance, etc)
-encoding stage (stress, violence, etc)
-storage stage (time, interference)
-retrieval stage (questioning, expectations, etc)
In general, we percieve and remember selectively and use imagination to fill in gaps

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10
Q

Eyewitness confidence

A

Low correlation between accuracy and confidence. (More confident does not = more accurate)

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11
Q

Composite sketch for eyewitness identification

A
  • Slightly above chance of recognition if drawn within 2 days (after 2 days, only 1-2% improvement)
  • better with more sketches or morphed into one
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12
Q

Mugshots for eyewitness identification

A
  • Tendency to pick someone even when not there
  • danger of interference
  • when picked someone incorrectly, less likely to pick out the perpetrator later, more committed to wrong identification
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13
Q

Line-ups for eyewitness identification

A

-Judgment based on actual memory and relative judgement

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14
Q

How to preform a better cognitive interview

A
  1. Recreate external and internal context
  2. Report everything, even if fragmented
  3. Report even in different orders
  4. Report from different perspectives
  5. Do not interrupt witness in middle of narative
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