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Myers' Psychology for AP Second Edition Unit 7: Cognition 

Myers' Psychology for AP Second Edition Unit 7: Cognition 

Module 31: Studying and Building Memories 

Studying Memory 

  • Memory is learning that has persisted over time 
  • Memory is information that has been acquired, stored, and can be retrieved 
  • Memory can decline with age or after an incident 

Memory Models

  • Encoding is getting information into our brain 
  • Storage is retaining encoded information over time
  • Retrieval is getting information out of storage
  • Our brains process things simultaneously through parallel processing 
  • Everytime you learn something new, your brain's neural connections change, forming and strengthening pathways 
  • Sensory memory is very brief
  • Sensory memory records sensory information 
  • Short term memory is activated memory
  • Short term memory can only hold a few pieces of information at a time 
  • Long term memory is mostly permanent and limitless
  • Long term memory includes knowledge, skills, and experience 

Working Memory 

  • Short-term memory is active in processing information
  • It makes sense of new input and links it to long term memories 
  • Context and experience can guide us in how we interpret words and sounds 
  • Working memory focuses on conscious, active processing 
  • Without focused attention, information fades 

Building Memories: Encoding 

Dual-Track Memory: Effortful Versus Automatic Processing 

  • Explicit memories are facts and experiences we consciously know and declare 
  • Explicit memories are also called declarative memories 
  • Encoding explicit memories is effortful processing 
  • Automatic processing is the unconscious encoding of information 
  • Automatic processing produces implicit memories 
  • Implicit memories are independent from conscious recollection 
  • Implicit memories are also called nondeclarative memories 

Automatic Processing and Implicit Memories 

  • Implicit memories include procedural memories 
  • Implicit memories include classically conditioned associations 
  • We automatically process space, time, and frequency 
  • Space is often the location 
  • Time is going through a sequence of events
  • Frequency os keeping track of how many times something happened 

Effortful Processing and Explicit Memories 

  • Automatic processing is difficult to shut off 
  • With experience and practice reading becomes automatic 

Sensory Memory 

  • Sensory memory feeds our working memory 
  • Iconic memory is momentary 
  • Iconic memory usually involves visual stimuli 
  • Echoic memory is for auditory stimuli 
  • Auditory echoes linger for 3-4 seconds 

Capacity of Short-Term and Working Memory 

  • We can retain, in our short-term memory, up to seven information bits 
  • Short-term memories are very short 
  • Working memory capacity varies with age and other factors 
  • Young adults have large working memory capacity 
  • Multitasking is not as efficient
  • We do things better when we solely focus on one task at a time

Effortful Processing Strategies 

  • Effortful processing strategies boost our ability to form new memories 
  • Chunking organizes items into manageable units
  • Chunking happens automatically 
  • We remember chunks best when they are in meaningful arrangements 
  • Mnemonics are memory aids 
  • Many mnemonics create images because humans are good at remembering pictures
  • Peg-words sometimes come in the form of a jingle 
  • Chunking and mnemonics are good for unfamiliar material 
  • Acronyms can help as well
  • Hierarchies are categories and subcategories that organize pieces of information 
  • Organization helps with studying 

Distributed Practice 

  • We retain information better when we learn it over time 
  • This is known as the spacing effect
  • Massed practice, also known as cramming, is speedy short-term learning. This often gives the feeling of confidence 
  • Those who learn quickly also forget quickly 
  • Distributed practice is better for long term recall 
  • Repeated self testing or the testing effect enhances memory. It forces you to remember rather than reread

Levels of Processing 

  • Shallow processing is encoding on a basic level 
  • Shallow processing are things like letters or word sounds
  • Deep processing helps find the meaning of words
  • Deep processing encoded semantically 
  • Deeper processing can give a much better memory than shallow processing 

Making Material Personally Meaningful  

  • If new information does not relate to us, we have difficulty processing it 
  • Context also helps us remember things 
  • We do not recall what we read, we recall what we encode 
  • It is easier to remember your own notes than someone elses 
  • The amount remembered depends on time spent learning and making meaningful processing

Module 32: Memory Storage and Retrieval 

Memory Storage 

Retaining Information in the Brain 

  • The brain has a vast storage capacity 
  • Many parts of the brain work to encode, store, and retrieve information

Explicit Memory System: The Frontal Lobes and Hippocampus 

  • Explicit memories occur in the frontal lobes and hippocampus 
  • The frontal lobes deal with working memory processing 
  • The left brain and right brain have different processing functions 
  • The hippocampus helps process explicit memories for storage 
  • Amnesia is memory loss 
  • Damage to the hippocampus can result in disruption to the recall of explicit memories 
  • Subregions of the hippocampus serve different purposes. Some parts recognize faces while others smells
  • Sleep helps memory consolidation 
  • During sleep the hippocampus processes memories 

Implicit Memory System: The Cerebellum and Basal Ganglia 

  • The hippocampus and frontal lobes process explicit memories 
  • Explicit memories can be lost due to automatic processing 
  • The cerebellum helps form and stores implicit memories 
  • Implicit memories are often caused by classical conditioning 
  • Damage to the cerebellum leads people to be unable to develop conditioned reflexes 
  • The basal ganglia is a brain structure involved in motor movement 
  • The basal ganglia factilates procedural memories 
  • We lose many of our early memories because we index many explicit memories and the hippocampus is the last part to mature

The Amygdala, Emotions, and Memory 

  • Emotions trigger stress hormones. These hormones can influence memory formation 
  • Hormones let the brain know that something important is happening 
  • Stress hormones provoke the amygdala which sends activity that boosts the brain's memory forming areas
  • Emotions persis, even when we don't know what caused them 
  • Memory serves to predict the future and alert us of potential danger 
  • Flashbulb memories are clear memories. They are often of emotionally significant moments/events 

Synaptic Changes 

  • When there is an increase in a particular pathway it is because neural interconnections are forming and strengthening 
  • Long term potentiation is an increase in a cell's firing potential 
  • LTP is a physical basis for memory 
  • Once LTP has occurred, electric currents through the brain won't disrupt old memories 
  • The electric current will wipe out very recent memories 
  • Sleep helps save memories 

Retrieval: Getting Information Out 

Measuring Retention 

  • There are three measures of retention: recall, recognition, and relearning 
  • Recall is retrieving information that you learned at an earlier time
  • Recall is not currently in you conscious 
  • An example of recall is a fill in the blank question on a test
  • Recognition is identifying items that were previously learned
  • An example of recognition is a multiple choice question on a test
  • Relearning is when you learn something quicker because it is the second or third time you are hearing it 
  • We recognize easier than we recall 
  • Recognition is often quick 
  • Overlearning can increase retention 
  • We remember more than we can recall 

Retrieval Cues

  • Memories are stored in a web of associations 
  • Each memory is connected to others
  • Retrieval cues are associations you can use at a later time to access key information 
  • The more retrieval cues, the more likely you are at finding the memory

Priming 

  • Our best retrieval cues come from associations we made at the time of the event 
  • Associations can be smells, stastes, and sights that can evoke our memories 
  • We make associations without our awareness
  • Priming is making these associations 
  • Priming can influence our thoughts and behaviors

Context Dependent Memory 

  • Putting yourself back into the context of where you learned something can help you remember it 
  • Context helps encode your thoughts 

State Dependent Memory 

  • State dependent memory is what we learn while we are in different states, for example drunk or sober 
  • We are more likely to recall what we learned in that state when we are in the state again 
  • Emotions that accompany events, good or bad, can act as retrieval cues 
  • Memories are mood congruent 
  • When we are happy, we think of happy memories, which makes us continue to be happy 

Serial Position Effect 

  • The serial position effect is our tendency to recall the last and first items in a list the best 
  • The more time you spend on something the more likely you are to remember it 
  • The last item is a recency effect
  • The first item is a primacy effect 

Module 33: Forgetting, Memory Construction, and Memory Improvement 

Forgetting 

  • We forget things to try to declutter the brian 
  • Too much memory can cause us to lose the ability to understand the meaning behind something 
  • Sometimes we cannot control when we remember, which causes us to lose new information 
  • Memories are quirky 
  • Sometimes memory abandons us when we need it the most 

Forgetting and the Two-Track Mind 

  • Memory loss can be sever and permanent 
  • Memory loss can occur with age or from an accident 
  • Anterograde amnesia is being able to recall the past, but not being able to form new memories 
  • Retrograde amnesia is being able to form new memories, but not being able to recall the past 
  • Sometimes people lose their explicit memories but keep their implicit memories
  • People with amnesia can still find the bathroom in a "new" building, even if they can't tell you how they got there 

Encoding Failure 

  • What we never notice, we fail to encode 
  • What we fail to encode, we won't remember 
  • Age effects encoding efficiency 
  • Without effort, memories will not form 

Storage Decay 

  • Even if we encode something well, we can still forget it 
  • Forgetting starts off rapid, and then levels off 
  • Memories can be inaccessible for many reasons such as not being acquired, being discarded, or being out of reach 

Retrieval Failure 

  • Forgetting is not memories fading, but memories retrieved 
  • Retrieval problems contribute to an adults failing memory 
  • Retrieval problems occur from interference and motivated forgetting 

Interference 

  • Your brain never stops filling with information, but it does get cluttered 
  • Proactive interference occurs when old information disrupts recalling newer information
  • Retroactive information occurs when new information disrupts recalling old information
  • Information processes before sleep is protected from retroactive interference 
  • Positive transfer is when old information facilitates learning new information 

Motivated Forgetting 

  • When we remember the past, we often revise it 
  • Because we often revise, our memory can be very unreliable 
  • When we process information we filter, alter, or lose the majority of it 
  • We repress painful or bad memories to protect ourselves 

Memory Construction Errors

  • Memory is not precise 
  • We often reweave memories 

Misinformation and Imagination Effects 

  • Wording of questions can affect our memory 
  • The misinformation effect is when we incorporate misleading information into our memory of an event 
  • Hearing retellings can create false memories 
  • Imaginating events can create false memories 
  • Children are very confident in their false memories 

Source Amnesia 

  • The frailest parts of memory are the source
  • We can recognize a person but not where they are from
  • We can't remember if we dreamt something or if it really happened
  • Source amnesia is pretending we experienced something that we only heard, read, or imagined 
  • Misattribution and source amnesia are at the center of many false memories 
  • Deja vu is the sense the "I have already experienced this" 
  • Deja vu occurs because the stimulus is familiar and we cannot determine where we have seen it before 
  • We experience familiarity before remembering details 

Discerning True and False Memories 

  • We often fill memory gaps with reasonable guesses and assumptions 
  • Fake memories can feel real 
  • False memories are persistent 
  • We remember gists more than the words themselves

Children's Eyewitness Recall 

  • A child's memory can easily be molded 
  • Children often piece together different events to make fictitious ones 
  • Children often believe their false memories are real 
  • If they are asked in neutral words, children will give the truth of events 
  • If they are promoted, they might change their story. But more often than not they tell the truth 

Repressed or Constructed Memories of Abuse?

  • Sometimes people don't believe abuse survivors and sometimes innocent people are wrongly accused
  • Sometime therapists create false images in a patients mind. Although they are trying to help, the practice is looked down upon 
  • Even if the accusations are false, a patients memories are heartfelt 
  • Those who want to stop child abuse have agreed on the following things 
  • Child abuse happens
  • Injustice happens, both for those who were hurt and those wrongly convicted
  • Forgetting happens
  • Forgetting can happen because the incident was so long ago or because they didn't understand what was happening 
  • Recovered memories happen 
  • Memories of things before age 3 are unreliable 
  • The older or more intense the abuse, the more likely a child will remember it 
  • Memories recovered under hypnosis are unreliable 
  • Memories can be emotionally upsetting 

Improving Memory 

  • SQ3R can help you remember 
  • SQ3R stands for Survey, Question, Read, Retrieve, Review 
  • Constantly rehearsing should be spaced out 
  • Exercising new memories will strengthen them
  • Critical reflection helps more than simply rereading 
  • Studying actively and not the night before will be more effective 
  • Making the material meaningful is another strategy 
  • Applying knowledge to your own life will make you more likely to remember it 
  • Activating retrieval cues can jog your memory 
  • Mnemonic devices like rhymes can help you remember information 
  • Minimizing interference, like studying right before you go to bed, can help memory
  • Sleeping more will help your memory 
  • Testing your knowledge constantly can help you determine what you do and do not know
  • Study more of what you don't know so that you can learn to know it 

Module 34: Thinking, Concepts and Creativity 

Thinking and Concepts 

  • Cognition is all of the mental activities associated with thinking, knowing, remembering, and communicating information 
  • Humans have the ability to form concepts 
  • We mentally group similar objects, ideas, events, and people 
  • Concepts simplify thinking 
  • Concepts are formed by developing prototypes
  • Prototypes are our best example of a category 
  • A robin is a birdier bird than a penguin 
  • The farther away from a prototype, the more the category blurs
  • Concepts seep up thinking, but they are not always wise 

Creativity 

  • Creativity is the ability to produce novel and valuable ideas 
  • Convergent thinking narrows problem solving strategies to find one solution 
  • Divergent thinking gives many possible solutions 
  • Although there is no test to measure creativity a creative person needs expertise, imaginative skills, a venturesome personality, intrinsic motivation, and a creative environment 
  • Expertise is a well developed knowledge of a topic 
  • Imaginative skills allow us to see things in new ways 
  • A venturesome personality makes us want to take risks have have new experiences
  • Intrinsic motivation is being self driven by interest or satisfaction 
  • Creative people don't focus as much on deadlines or making money 
  • A creative environment helps support and create creative ideas 
  • Creative environments can help with team building and working with others 
  • To become more creative you should develop expertise, allow time for incubation, set aside free time, and experience other cultures
  • Developing expertise will allow you to find you passion 
  • Allowing time for incubation makes you unconsciously process associations 
  • Setting aside free time from TV or the Internet will allow your mind to explore on its own
  • Experiencing cultures and other ways of thinking will make you more creative and see things differently 

Module 35: Solving Problems and Making Decisions

Problem Solving: Strategies and Obstacles 

  • Humans have problem solving skills
  • Some problems are solved through trial and error 
  • Algorithms are step by step processes that guarantee a solution
  • Algorithms can be long and tiring 
  • Heuristics are simpler thinking strategies 
  • Insight is a sudden realization of an answer
  • Insight is sudden, there are no signs that we are getting closer to the solution when it occurs 
  • We seek evidence that supports our ideas. This is confirmation bias 
  • Fixation is the inability to see a problem from a new perspective 
  • We use our mental set to approach a problem with strategies that have previously worked 

Forming Good and Bad Decisions and Judgments 

  • When making everyday decisions and judgments we usually rely on our intuition 
  • Intuition is effortless, immediate, and automatic
  • Intuition can be a feeling or a thought 
  • Mental shortcuts allow for snap judgments 

The Representative Heuristic 

  • Representative heuristics are judging the likelihood of things based on how well they match our prototypes 
  • However, these heuristics often cause us to ignore other relative information 

The Availability Heuristic 

  • The availability heuristic is when we estimate the likelihood of an event based on how mentally available it is 
  • Casinos make us remember wins and not loses 
  • Information that translates into vividness, recentness, or distinctiveness seem more common place
  • We tend to fear the wrong things
  • We fear extremely unlikely events
  • Dramatic outcomes cause and effect, not really probabilities 
  • Humans overfeel and underthink 

Overconfidence 

  • We are more confident than correct
  • People overestimate their performances 
  • Humans have overconfidence 
  • Projects generally take twice the time people believe they will 
  • Humans overestimate future leisure time
  • Despite continuing to be wrong, we continue to be overconfident in ourselves and our estimates
  • People who are overconfident tend to be happier 

Belief Perseverance 

  • We tend to cling to our beliefs, even if there is evidence suggesting otherwise 
  • Belief perseverance fuels social conflict as no one is willing to change their minds or accept the other sides viewpoint 
  • Considering the opposite can help you limit your own belief perseverance 
  • The more we think about why our beliefs are true, the more we support them 
  • Prejudice is persistent 

The Effects of Framing 

  • Framing is the way an issue is presented 
  • A 10% risk of dying sounds scarier than a 90% survival rate
  • Framing is important in everyday lives
  • Many countries have used framing to ask people if they want to be an organ donor, save for retirement, or help save the planet 
  • Those who understand framing can use it to influence our decisions 

The Perils and Powers of Intuition

  • Intuition can stop us from seeing problems clearly, making wise decision and judgments, and reason logically
  • Intuition perils fuel fear and prejudice
  • Intuition is huge
  • Intuition focuses on what we are not consciously processing 
  • We make wiser decisions when we do not think about them
  • Intuition is adaptive 
  • We assume small things are far away so that we are not scared
  • Intuition is recognition that is born of experience 
  • Intuition is implicit knowledge 
  • Humans tend to overfeel and underthink 

Module 36: Thinking and Language 

  • When we speak, it is actually air pressure beating on the eardrum 
  • Language is spoken, written, or signed words that convey a meaning
  • Language is fundamental 

Language Structure 

  • Phonemes are the smallest distinctive sounds in a language 
  • Both bat and chat have three phonemes (b, a, t and ch, a, t) 
  • English has about 40 phonemes
  • Constants matter more than vowels in phonemes 
  • Morphemes are the smallest units that carry meaning 
  • Some words like I or bat are also phonemes
  • Prefixes and suffixes are types of morphemes
  • Grammar is the set of rules that allow us to form sentences 
  • Semantics derive meaning from sounds
  • Syntax combine words into grammatically correct sentences
  • There are more than 100,000 morphemes
  • There are more than 616,500 words in the Oxford English Dictionary 

Language Development 

  • Between your first birthday and high school graduation you will learn 60,000 words (in your native language) 
  • You learn nearly 3,500 words per year 
  • You learn nearly 10 words per day 
  • Humans have a facility for language 
  • We make grammatically correct sentences without even thinking about it 
  • Humans also have the ability to analyze social context clues that allow them to know if saying certain sentences is OK

When Do We Learn Language? 

Receptive Language 

  • Language develops from simple to complex
  • By 4 months, babies can recognize different words and read lips 
  • Receptive language is the ability to understand what is said to and about a person, typically babies 
  • At 7 months babies start to segment sounds into words 

Productive Language 

  • A baby's productive language is their ability to produce words 
  • The babbling stage begins at around 4 months 
  • Babies utter basic sounds by opening and closing their mouths 
  • The sounds made in the babbling stage can be from various languages 
  • At around 10 months, babbling has changed to just the household language 
  • By 1, most babies enter the one-word stage 
  • During the word word stage, babies usually say a single noun 
  • At about 18 months babies say one word per day rather than one word per week 
  • By 2, babies are in the two-word stage 
  • The two-word stage is similar to telegraphic speech 
  • The two-word stage is mainly made up of nouns and verbs that are in a sensible order

Explaining Language Development 

  • Languages are diverse but share some universal grammar 
  • All languages have nouns, verbs, and adjectives. The order of words can change throughout the many languages 
  • English: white house 
  • Spanish: casa blanca 
  • Humans are born with a predisposition to learn grammar rules
  • We are not born knowing a specific language 
  • Babies all across the word always start with saying simple nouns 
  • Biology and experience work together to learn a language 

Statistical Learning 

  • When adults hear a different language, they cannot tell apart the different syllables 
  • Babies have the ability to differentiate the statistical aspects of language 
  • A babies brain can tell syllables apart and know what letters go with each other 
  • Babies can also tell the difference between and ABA and an ABB pattern of speech 

Critical Periods 

  • It is harder to learn a language at an older age 
  • Childhood represents the critical period for learning language 
  • Those who learn a second language later on have trouble with using the correct accent and grammar 
  • Deaf children have an easier time when they have been exposed to some form of sign language 

The Brain and Language 

  • Aphasia is the impairment of language. It can result from damage to either Broca's or Wernicke's Area 
  • Broca's area is located in the left frontal lobe
  • Damage to Broca's area results in impaired language expression, such as speaking or writing 
  • Wernicke's Area is in the left temporal lobe
  • Damage to Wernicke's area results in no longer being able to comprehend language 
  • The brain divides mental functions so that they are easier to processes 
  • The brain tends to divide speaking, perceiving, thinking, and remembering into further subfunctions 

Language and Thought 

Language Influences Thinking 

  • Whorf believed language shapes a person's ideas 
  • However, his linguistic determinism hypothesis is too extreme 
  • We imagine things that can not be described in words 
  • We have unsymbolized thoughts 
  • A person can think differently depending on what language they use 
  • They often answer based on the beliefs of the language the question was asked in 
  • Words do not determine our thoughts, but they do influence them 
  • Words have a large role in determining colors as some languages have more words for distinct shades
  • We choose our words carefully despite subtle differences
  • Expanding upon language is expanding thinking 

Thinking in Images 

  • Implicit memories are nondeclarative and procedural 
  • Words convey ideas, but ideas can also convey words
  • Artists, composers, poetsm mathematicians, athletes, scientists, and almost everyone can think in images 
  • Imagining a physical experience actives the same neural networks that activate when actually doing the activity 
  • Mental rehearsal can help you achieve a goal 
  • A greater result occurs when you imagine the process rather than the outcome 
  • New words combine old words to express new ideas 
GB

Myers' Psychology for AP Second Edition Unit 7: Cognition 

Myers' Psychology for AP Second Edition Unit 7: Cognition 

Module 31: Studying and Building Memories 

Studying Memory 

  • Memory is learning that has persisted over time 
  • Memory is information that has been acquired, stored, and can be retrieved 
  • Memory can decline with age or after an incident 

Memory Models

  • Encoding is getting information into our brain 
  • Storage is retaining encoded information over time
  • Retrieval is getting information out of storage
  • Our brains process things simultaneously through parallel processing 
  • Everytime you learn something new, your brain's neural connections change, forming and strengthening pathways 
  • Sensory memory is very brief
  • Sensory memory records sensory information 
  • Short term memory is activated memory
  • Short term memory can only hold a few pieces of information at a time 
  • Long term memory is mostly permanent and limitless
  • Long term memory includes knowledge, skills, and experience 

Working Memory 

  • Short-term memory is active in processing information
  • It makes sense of new input and links it to long term memories 
  • Context and experience can guide us in how we interpret words and sounds 
  • Working memory focuses on conscious, active processing 
  • Without focused attention, information fades 

Building Memories: Encoding 

Dual-Track Memory: Effortful Versus Automatic Processing 

  • Explicit memories are facts and experiences we consciously know and declare 
  • Explicit memories are also called declarative memories 
  • Encoding explicit memories is effortful processing 
  • Automatic processing is the unconscious encoding of information 
  • Automatic processing produces implicit memories 
  • Implicit memories are independent from conscious recollection 
  • Implicit memories are also called nondeclarative memories 

Automatic Processing and Implicit Memories 

  • Implicit memories include procedural memories 
  • Implicit memories include classically conditioned associations 
  • We automatically process space, time, and frequency 
  • Space is often the location 
  • Time is going through a sequence of events
  • Frequency os keeping track of how many times something happened 

Effortful Processing and Explicit Memories 

  • Automatic processing is difficult to shut off 
  • With experience and practice reading becomes automatic 

Sensory Memory 

  • Sensory memory feeds our working memory 
  • Iconic memory is momentary 
  • Iconic memory usually involves visual stimuli 
  • Echoic memory is for auditory stimuli 
  • Auditory echoes linger for 3-4 seconds 

Capacity of Short-Term and Working Memory 

  • We can retain, in our short-term memory, up to seven information bits 
  • Short-term memories are very short 
  • Working memory capacity varies with age and other factors 
  • Young adults have large working memory capacity 
  • Multitasking is not as efficient
  • We do things better when we solely focus on one task at a time

Effortful Processing Strategies 

  • Effortful processing strategies boost our ability to form new memories 
  • Chunking organizes items into manageable units
  • Chunking happens automatically 
  • We remember chunks best when they are in meaningful arrangements 
  • Mnemonics are memory aids 
  • Many mnemonics create images because humans are good at remembering pictures
  • Peg-words sometimes come in the form of a jingle 
  • Chunking and mnemonics are good for unfamiliar material 
  • Acronyms can help as well
  • Hierarchies are categories and subcategories that organize pieces of information 
  • Organization helps with studying 

Distributed Practice 

  • We retain information better when we learn it over time 
  • This is known as the spacing effect
  • Massed practice, also known as cramming, is speedy short-term learning. This often gives the feeling of confidence 
  • Those who learn quickly also forget quickly 
  • Distributed practice is better for long term recall 
  • Repeated self testing or the testing effect enhances memory. It forces you to remember rather than reread

Levels of Processing 

  • Shallow processing is encoding on a basic level 
  • Shallow processing are things like letters or word sounds
  • Deep processing helps find the meaning of words
  • Deep processing encoded semantically 
  • Deeper processing can give a much better memory than shallow processing 

Making Material Personally Meaningful  

  • If new information does not relate to us, we have difficulty processing it 
  • Context also helps us remember things 
  • We do not recall what we read, we recall what we encode 
  • It is easier to remember your own notes than someone elses 
  • The amount remembered depends on time spent learning and making meaningful processing

Module 32: Memory Storage and Retrieval 

Memory Storage 

Retaining Information in the Brain 

  • The brain has a vast storage capacity 
  • Many parts of the brain work to encode, store, and retrieve information

Explicit Memory System: The Frontal Lobes and Hippocampus 

  • Explicit memories occur in the frontal lobes and hippocampus 
  • The frontal lobes deal with working memory processing 
  • The left brain and right brain have different processing functions 
  • The hippocampus helps process explicit memories for storage 
  • Amnesia is memory loss 
  • Damage to the hippocampus can result in disruption to the recall of explicit memories 
  • Subregions of the hippocampus serve different purposes. Some parts recognize faces while others smells
  • Sleep helps memory consolidation 
  • During sleep the hippocampus processes memories 

Implicit Memory System: The Cerebellum and Basal Ganglia 

  • The hippocampus and frontal lobes process explicit memories 
  • Explicit memories can be lost due to automatic processing 
  • The cerebellum helps form and stores implicit memories 
  • Implicit memories are often caused by classical conditioning 
  • Damage to the cerebellum leads people to be unable to develop conditioned reflexes 
  • The basal ganglia is a brain structure involved in motor movement 
  • The basal ganglia factilates procedural memories 
  • We lose many of our early memories because we index many explicit memories and the hippocampus is the last part to mature

The Amygdala, Emotions, and Memory 

  • Emotions trigger stress hormones. These hormones can influence memory formation 
  • Hormones let the brain know that something important is happening 
  • Stress hormones provoke the amygdala which sends activity that boosts the brain's memory forming areas
  • Emotions persis, even when we don't know what caused them 
  • Memory serves to predict the future and alert us of potential danger 
  • Flashbulb memories are clear memories. They are often of emotionally significant moments/events 

Synaptic Changes 

  • When there is an increase in a particular pathway it is because neural interconnections are forming and strengthening 
  • Long term potentiation is an increase in a cell's firing potential 
  • LTP is a physical basis for memory 
  • Once LTP has occurred, electric currents through the brain won't disrupt old memories 
  • The electric current will wipe out very recent memories 
  • Sleep helps save memories 

Retrieval: Getting Information Out 

Measuring Retention 

  • There are three measures of retention: recall, recognition, and relearning 
  • Recall is retrieving information that you learned at an earlier time
  • Recall is not currently in you conscious 
  • An example of recall is a fill in the blank question on a test
  • Recognition is identifying items that were previously learned
  • An example of recognition is a multiple choice question on a test
  • Relearning is when you learn something quicker because it is the second or third time you are hearing it 
  • We recognize easier than we recall 
  • Recognition is often quick 
  • Overlearning can increase retention 
  • We remember more than we can recall 

Retrieval Cues

  • Memories are stored in a web of associations 
  • Each memory is connected to others
  • Retrieval cues are associations you can use at a later time to access key information 
  • The more retrieval cues, the more likely you are at finding the memory

Priming 

  • Our best retrieval cues come from associations we made at the time of the event 
  • Associations can be smells, stastes, and sights that can evoke our memories 
  • We make associations without our awareness
  • Priming is making these associations 
  • Priming can influence our thoughts and behaviors

Context Dependent Memory 

  • Putting yourself back into the context of where you learned something can help you remember it 
  • Context helps encode your thoughts 

State Dependent Memory 

  • State dependent memory is what we learn while we are in different states, for example drunk or sober 
  • We are more likely to recall what we learned in that state when we are in the state again 
  • Emotions that accompany events, good or bad, can act as retrieval cues 
  • Memories are mood congruent 
  • When we are happy, we think of happy memories, which makes us continue to be happy 

Serial Position Effect 

  • The serial position effect is our tendency to recall the last and first items in a list the best 
  • The more time you spend on something the more likely you are to remember it 
  • The last item is a recency effect
  • The first item is a primacy effect 

Module 33: Forgetting, Memory Construction, and Memory Improvement 

Forgetting 

  • We forget things to try to declutter the brian 
  • Too much memory can cause us to lose the ability to understand the meaning behind something 
  • Sometimes we cannot control when we remember, which causes us to lose new information 
  • Memories are quirky 
  • Sometimes memory abandons us when we need it the most 

Forgetting and the Two-Track Mind 

  • Memory loss can be sever and permanent 
  • Memory loss can occur with age or from an accident 
  • Anterograde amnesia is being able to recall the past, but not being able to form new memories 
  • Retrograde amnesia is being able to form new memories, but not being able to recall the past 
  • Sometimes people lose their explicit memories but keep their implicit memories
  • People with amnesia can still find the bathroom in a "new" building, even if they can't tell you how they got there 

Encoding Failure 

  • What we never notice, we fail to encode 
  • What we fail to encode, we won't remember 
  • Age effects encoding efficiency 
  • Without effort, memories will not form 

Storage Decay 

  • Even if we encode something well, we can still forget it 
  • Forgetting starts off rapid, and then levels off 
  • Memories can be inaccessible for many reasons such as not being acquired, being discarded, or being out of reach 

Retrieval Failure 

  • Forgetting is not memories fading, but memories retrieved 
  • Retrieval problems contribute to an adults failing memory 
  • Retrieval problems occur from interference and motivated forgetting 

Interference 

  • Your brain never stops filling with information, but it does get cluttered 
  • Proactive interference occurs when old information disrupts recalling newer information
  • Retroactive information occurs when new information disrupts recalling old information
  • Information processes before sleep is protected from retroactive interference 
  • Positive transfer is when old information facilitates learning new information 

Motivated Forgetting 

  • When we remember the past, we often revise it 
  • Because we often revise, our memory can be very unreliable 
  • When we process information we filter, alter, or lose the majority of it 
  • We repress painful or bad memories to protect ourselves 

Memory Construction Errors

  • Memory is not precise 
  • We often reweave memories 

Misinformation and Imagination Effects 

  • Wording of questions can affect our memory 
  • The misinformation effect is when we incorporate misleading information into our memory of an event 
  • Hearing retellings can create false memories 
  • Imaginating events can create false memories 
  • Children are very confident in their false memories 

Source Amnesia 

  • The frailest parts of memory are the source
  • We can recognize a person but not where they are from
  • We can't remember if we dreamt something or if it really happened
  • Source amnesia is pretending we experienced something that we only heard, read, or imagined 
  • Misattribution and source amnesia are at the center of many false memories 
  • Deja vu is the sense the "I have already experienced this" 
  • Deja vu occurs because the stimulus is familiar and we cannot determine where we have seen it before 
  • We experience familiarity before remembering details 

Discerning True and False Memories 

  • We often fill memory gaps with reasonable guesses and assumptions 
  • Fake memories can feel real 
  • False memories are persistent 
  • We remember gists more than the words themselves

Children's Eyewitness Recall 

  • A child's memory can easily be molded 
  • Children often piece together different events to make fictitious ones 
  • Children often believe their false memories are real 
  • If they are asked in neutral words, children will give the truth of events 
  • If they are promoted, they might change their story. But more often than not they tell the truth 

Repressed or Constructed Memories of Abuse?

  • Sometimes people don't believe abuse survivors and sometimes innocent people are wrongly accused
  • Sometime therapists create false images in a patients mind. Although they are trying to help, the practice is looked down upon 
  • Even if the accusations are false, a patients memories are heartfelt 
  • Those who want to stop child abuse have agreed on the following things 
  • Child abuse happens
  • Injustice happens, both for those who were hurt and those wrongly convicted
  • Forgetting happens
  • Forgetting can happen because the incident was so long ago or because they didn't understand what was happening 
  • Recovered memories happen 
  • Memories of things before age 3 are unreliable 
  • The older or more intense the abuse, the more likely a child will remember it 
  • Memories recovered under hypnosis are unreliable 
  • Memories can be emotionally upsetting 

Improving Memory 

  • SQ3R can help you remember 
  • SQ3R stands for Survey, Question, Read, Retrieve, Review 
  • Constantly rehearsing should be spaced out 
  • Exercising new memories will strengthen them
  • Critical reflection helps more than simply rereading 
  • Studying actively and not the night before will be more effective 
  • Making the material meaningful is another strategy 
  • Applying knowledge to your own life will make you more likely to remember it 
  • Activating retrieval cues can jog your memory 
  • Mnemonic devices like rhymes can help you remember information 
  • Minimizing interference, like studying right before you go to bed, can help memory
  • Sleeping more will help your memory 
  • Testing your knowledge constantly can help you determine what you do and do not know
  • Study more of what you don't know so that you can learn to know it 

Module 34: Thinking, Concepts and Creativity 

Thinking and Concepts 

  • Cognition is all of the mental activities associated with thinking, knowing, remembering, and communicating information 
  • Humans have the ability to form concepts 
  • We mentally group similar objects, ideas, events, and people 
  • Concepts simplify thinking 
  • Concepts are formed by developing prototypes
  • Prototypes are our best example of a category 
  • A robin is a birdier bird than a penguin 
  • The farther away from a prototype, the more the category blurs
  • Concepts seep up thinking, but they are not always wise 

Creativity 

  • Creativity is the ability to produce novel and valuable ideas 
  • Convergent thinking narrows problem solving strategies to find one solution 
  • Divergent thinking gives many possible solutions 
  • Although there is no test to measure creativity a creative person needs expertise, imaginative skills, a venturesome personality, intrinsic motivation, and a creative environment 
  • Expertise is a well developed knowledge of a topic 
  • Imaginative skills allow us to see things in new ways 
  • A venturesome personality makes us want to take risks have have new experiences
  • Intrinsic motivation is being self driven by interest or satisfaction 
  • Creative people don't focus as much on deadlines or making money 
  • A creative environment helps support and create creative ideas 
  • Creative environments can help with team building and working with others 
  • To become more creative you should develop expertise, allow time for incubation, set aside free time, and experience other cultures
  • Developing expertise will allow you to find you passion 
  • Allowing time for incubation makes you unconsciously process associations 
  • Setting aside free time from TV or the Internet will allow your mind to explore on its own
  • Experiencing cultures and other ways of thinking will make you more creative and see things differently 

Module 35: Solving Problems and Making Decisions

Problem Solving: Strategies and Obstacles 

  • Humans have problem solving skills
  • Some problems are solved through trial and error 
  • Algorithms are step by step processes that guarantee a solution
  • Algorithms can be long and tiring 
  • Heuristics are simpler thinking strategies 
  • Insight is a sudden realization of an answer
  • Insight is sudden, there are no signs that we are getting closer to the solution when it occurs 
  • We seek evidence that supports our ideas. This is confirmation bias 
  • Fixation is the inability to see a problem from a new perspective 
  • We use our mental set to approach a problem with strategies that have previously worked 

Forming Good and Bad Decisions and Judgments 

  • When making everyday decisions and judgments we usually rely on our intuition 
  • Intuition is effortless, immediate, and automatic
  • Intuition can be a feeling or a thought 
  • Mental shortcuts allow for snap judgments 

The Representative Heuristic 

  • Representative heuristics are judging the likelihood of things based on how well they match our prototypes 
  • However, these heuristics often cause us to ignore other relative information 

The Availability Heuristic 

  • The availability heuristic is when we estimate the likelihood of an event based on how mentally available it is 
  • Casinos make us remember wins and not loses 
  • Information that translates into vividness, recentness, or distinctiveness seem more common place
  • We tend to fear the wrong things
  • We fear extremely unlikely events
  • Dramatic outcomes cause and effect, not really probabilities 
  • Humans overfeel and underthink 

Overconfidence 

  • We are more confident than correct
  • People overestimate their performances 
  • Humans have overconfidence 
  • Projects generally take twice the time people believe they will 
  • Humans overestimate future leisure time
  • Despite continuing to be wrong, we continue to be overconfident in ourselves and our estimates
  • People who are overconfident tend to be happier 

Belief Perseverance 

  • We tend to cling to our beliefs, even if there is evidence suggesting otherwise 
  • Belief perseverance fuels social conflict as no one is willing to change their minds or accept the other sides viewpoint 
  • Considering the opposite can help you limit your own belief perseverance 
  • The more we think about why our beliefs are true, the more we support them 
  • Prejudice is persistent 

The Effects of Framing 

  • Framing is the way an issue is presented 
  • A 10% risk of dying sounds scarier than a 90% survival rate
  • Framing is important in everyday lives
  • Many countries have used framing to ask people if they want to be an organ donor, save for retirement, or help save the planet 
  • Those who understand framing can use it to influence our decisions 

The Perils and Powers of Intuition

  • Intuition can stop us from seeing problems clearly, making wise decision and judgments, and reason logically
  • Intuition perils fuel fear and prejudice
  • Intuition is huge
  • Intuition focuses on what we are not consciously processing 
  • We make wiser decisions when we do not think about them
  • Intuition is adaptive 
  • We assume small things are far away so that we are not scared
  • Intuition is recognition that is born of experience 
  • Intuition is implicit knowledge 
  • Humans tend to overfeel and underthink 

Module 36: Thinking and Language 

  • When we speak, it is actually air pressure beating on the eardrum 
  • Language is spoken, written, or signed words that convey a meaning
  • Language is fundamental 

Language Structure 

  • Phonemes are the smallest distinctive sounds in a language 
  • Both bat and chat have three phonemes (b, a, t and ch, a, t) 
  • English has about 40 phonemes
  • Constants matter more than vowels in phonemes 
  • Morphemes are the smallest units that carry meaning 
  • Some words like I or bat are also phonemes
  • Prefixes and suffixes are types of morphemes
  • Grammar is the set of rules that allow us to form sentences 
  • Semantics derive meaning from sounds
  • Syntax combine words into grammatically correct sentences
  • There are more than 100,000 morphemes
  • There are more than 616,500 words in the Oxford English Dictionary 

Language Development 

  • Between your first birthday and high school graduation you will learn 60,000 words (in your native language) 
  • You learn nearly 3,500 words per year 
  • You learn nearly 10 words per day 
  • Humans have a facility for language 
  • We make grammatically correct sentences without even thinking about it 
  • Humans also have the ability to analyze social context clues that allow them to know if saying certain sentences is OK

When Do We Learn Language? 

Receptive Language 

  • Language develops from simple to complex
  • By 4 months, babies can recognize different words and read lips 
  • Receptive language is the ability to understand what is said to and about a person, typically babies 
  • At 7 months babies start to segment sounds into words 

Productive Language 

  • A baby's productive language is their ability to produce words 
  • The babbling stage begins at around 4 months 
  • Babies utter basic sounds by opening and closing their mouths 
  • The sounds made in the babbling stage can be from various languages 
  • At around 10 months, babbling has changed to just the household language 
  • By 1, most babies enter the one-word stage 
  • During the word word stage, babies usually say a single noun 
  • At about 18 months babies say one word per day rather than one word per week 
  • By 2, babies are in the two-word stage 
  • The two-word stage is similar to telegraphic speech 
  • The two-word stage is mainly made up of nouns and verbs that are in a sensible order

Explaining Language Development 

  • Languages are diverse but share some universal grammar 
  • All languages have nouns, verbs, and adjectives. The order of words can change throughout the many languages 
  • English: white house 
  • Spanish: casa blanca 
  • Humans are born with a predisposition to learn grammar rules
  • We are not born knowing a specific language 
  • Babies all across the word always start with saying simple nouns 
  • Biology and experience work together to learn a language 

Statistical Learning 

  • When adults hear a different language, they cannot tell apart the different syllables 
  • Babies have the ability to differentiate the statistical aspects of language 
  • A babies brain can tell syllables apart and know what letters go with each other 
  • Babies can also tell the difference between and ABA and an ABB pattern of speech 

Critical Periods 

  • It is harder to learn a language at an older age 
  • Childhood represents the critical period for learning language 
  • Those who learn a second language later on have trouble with using the correct accent and grammar 
  • Deaf children have an easier time when they have been exposed to some form of sign language 

The Brain and Language 

  • Aphasia is the impairment of language. It can result from damage to either Broca's or Wernicke's Area 
  • Broca's area is located in the left frontal lobe
  • Damage to Broca's area results in impaired language expression, such as speaking or writing 
  • Wernicke's Area is in the left temporal lobe
  • Damage to Wernicke's area results in no longer being able to comprehend language 
  • The brain divides mental functions so that they are easier to processes 
  • The brain tends to divide speaking, perceiving, thinking, and remembering into further subfunctions 

Language and Thought 

Language Influences Thinking 

  • Whorf believed language shapes a person's ideas 
  • However, his linguistic determinism hypothesis is too extreme 
  • We imagine things that can not be described in words 
  • We have unsymbolized thoughts 
  • A person can think differently depending on what language they use 
  • They often answer based on the beliefs of the language the question was asked in 
  • Words do not determine our thoughts, but they do influence them 
  • Words have a large role in determining colors as some languages have more words for distinct shades
  • We choose our words carefully despite subtle differences
  • Expanding upon language is expanding thinking 

Thinking in Images 

  • Implicit memories are nondeclarative and procedural 
  • Words convey ideas, but ideas can also convey words
  • Artists, composers, poetsm mathematicians, athletes, scientists, and almost everyone can think in images 
  • Imagining a physical experience actives the same neural networks that activate when actually doing the activity 
  • Mental rehearsal can help you achieve a goal 
  • A greater result occurs when you imagine the process rather than the outcome 
  • New words combine old words to express new ideas