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March 28, 2023 by ktangen

Decoding

Retrieval

Notes

 

Memory Principles

 

  1. some things are easier to remember than others
  • length
  • content
  • familiarity
  • similarity
  • personal experience
  • self-referent
  • within-list associations
  • adjacent associations
  1. memories can be stored in different in different media
  • words can be stored as sight, sound or meaning
  • sounds can be stored as words or music
  • aren’t just visual processors or auditory learners
  • use a wide range of sensory media
  •  switching to another media when you need more cues
  1. two separate phases of memory
  • available
  • accessible
  • tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon
  1. memory is generative
  • don’t store exact copies
  • we are great at meaning extraction
  • MIDI file
  • blueprint
  • recipe
  • Spare encoding
  1. memories are stable but changeable
  • misinformation effect
  1. we make up memories
  • photographs
  • cognitive distortions
  • vividness of a memory isn’t a good indicator of its truth
  • eye witness testimony
    • collaborating evidence must also be present
  • memory cooks who store the recipe
  • Elizabeth Loftus
    • small changes in questions can produce different results
    • smashed or bumped
    • Did you see the stop sign? or Did you see a stop sign?
    • How tall a basketball player or how short
    • What shade of blue was the wallet
  • exact process of how false memories are generated isn’t clear
    • brain pulls bits for unrelated experiences
    • combines them into a new “authentic” memory
  • source monitoring
    • focus is on meaning extraction, not making a mental bibliography

 

Retrieval Tips

GENERAL

  1. Attention
  2. Bits (chunk)
  3. Chain the parts together
  4. “Don’t Forget” strategy
  5. Distributed practice
  6. Encoding Specificity Principle
  7. Switch tasks
  8. Higher criterion
  9. Overlearn
  10. Warm up

 

FACTS

  Good Items

  1. Positive
  2. Distinctive
  3. Meaningful
  4. Related to you & your experience

  Organizing

  1. Most important first
  2. Most important last
  3. Put it in context
  4. Blocking
  5. Categorize

  Encoding

  1. Reduction mnemonics
  2. Elaboration mnemonics
  3. Rehearse
  4. Visualize
  5. Associate items places & things
  6. Teach yourself
  7. Teach others

  Retrieval

  1. Retrieve often
  2. Retrieve in the same order every time
  3. Cluster
  • Even if items aren’t clustered
  • Try to remember them by clusters

When don’t remember

  1. Recall from different perspectives
  • realtor
  • burglar
  • buyer
  1. “Starts with the letter”
  • Lexical retrieval = search for a desired word
    • Can’t find it by meaning
    • Try it alphabetically
    • Or…by sound
  • Tip of Tongue Phenomenon
  • “Nothing will come”
  • “Empty gap”
  • Often retrieve partial info
  • About once a week
  1. “Sounds like”
  • Tip of the Ear?
  • What did you say?
  • Remember before the answer comes
  • I know I’ve heard that somewhere
  1. Follow a script
  • Cognitive maps
  • Cultural rules
  1. Ask for clues
  2. Rest
  • Rest: Incubation = allowing a problem to “perk”
  • Why it might work:
    • Changes focus more details to more abstract representations
    • Memories consolidate over time
    • New stimuli may come along
    • Get more sleep
    • Practice effects
    • Problem solving as skill

Types of Retrieval

  • Free recall: first and last items
  • get distracted, recency goes away
  • Cued recall
  • Recognition

 

Filed Under: Learning

‘There are two great principles of psychology: people have a tremendous capacity to change, and we usually don’t.”   Ken Tangen

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