interference theory

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    • underwood & postman 1960?
      • interference experiment
      • p divided into 2 groups:
      • both groups had to remember list of paired words - list a
      • experimental group also had to learn another list where 2nd paired word is different - list b
      • control group not given 2nd list
      • all p asked to recall list a
    • what is proactive interference?
      • older memories interfere & hinder you from learning/recalling newer ones
    • example of proactive interference?
      • when trying to recall a new phone number, the old one could proactively interfere with the recall
    • what is retroactive interference?
      • newer information gets in the way of trying to recall older information
    • example of retroactive interference?
      • you may already know greeting for hello in french but when you learn in in german it is more difficult to recall
    • underwood & postman findings?
      • evidence of retroactive interference
      • p in experimental group found recall of list a more difficult
      • as new words from list b had interfered with their old memories of the previous list
    • when is interference worst?
      when memories are similar
    • mcgeoch & mcdonald 1931?
      • investigated similarity of materials
      • gave p list of 10 adjectives (list a) until they could remember 100% accurately
      • resting interval of 10 mins when they learned list b
    • mcgeoch & mcdonald method?
      g1 - synonyms
      g2 - antonyms
      g3 - words unrelated to originals
      g4 - nonsense syllables
      g5 - 3 digit numbers
      g6 - no new list just rested
    • mcgeoch & mcdonald findings?
      • if list b was synonyms recall was poor - 12%
      • if list b was nonsense syllables had less effect - 26%
      • if list b was numbers recall was best - 37%
      • interference is strongest when words/materials being learnt is similar in meaning
    • 2 * for interference theory
      1. evidence to support from baddeley & hitch 1977
      2. thousands of lab experiments for this theory
    • 3 X of interference theory?
      1. uses artificial stimuli
      2. may not actually cause memory to be forgotten - ceraso 1967
      3. evidence to suggest individual differences from kane & engle 2000
    • X artificial stimuli?
      • list of words have no personal meaning to participants in everyday life
      • we try to remember a much wider variety of complex things
      • ? ecological
      • it is difficult to generalise findings to explanations of forgetting in real world
    • X may not cause a memory to be forgotten?
      • effects of interference may be temporary
      • ceraso 1967 found if memory was tested again after 24 hrs recognition of words showed considerable spontaneous recovery
      • ? internal
      • shows interference may only occur because memories are temporarily not accessible rather than having actually been lost & become unavailable
      • suggests may be more complex reasons for why we forget info long term rather than being interfered with
    • * evidence to support?
      • baddley & hitch 1977 asked rugby players to name teams had played during season weekly
      • most players missed some games so last team that some had played had been 2/3 weeks ago
      • results showed recall did not depend on how long ago team had played but number of games person had played
      • players recall of team from 3 weeks ago was better if no matches had been played since then compared to being asked 1 week later but with 3 matches played
      • demonstrates retroactive interference acts as explanation as to why we forget info in everyday situations
    • * thousands of lab experiments for this theory?
      • lab experiments allow researcher to control evs that could affect results
      • e.g was conducted in controlled environment where factors such as time of day are controlled - participant/situation variables
      • * internal
      • controlled nature of research methods involved allow us to establish cause & effect relationship between introduction of new info & how much info we forget
    • X evidence to suggest individual differences influence interference?
      • kane & engle 2000 demonstrated individuals with a greating wm span were less susceptible to proactive interference
      • p were given 3 word lists to learn & those with low wm span showed greater proactive interference when recalling 2nd & 3rd list
      • demonstrates that there may be other factors that influence whether or not we forget things such as working memory
    • what is the interference theory?
      • when we forget things because one memory has disrupted/interfered with another memory
    • what is PORN?
      P - proactive
      O - old
      R - retroactive
      N - new