Explanations of forgetting

Cards (20)

  • what is the interference theory?
    forgetting when similar material is confused in recall from LTM
    info in LTM is becoming disorted or confused by other info during coding , leading to inaccurate recall from LTM
  • what are the two types of interference?
    proactive
    retroactive
  • what is proactive interference?
    when past memories inhibit an individuals full potential to retain new info
  • what is retroactive interference?
    when newly learned info interferes with the recall of previously learned info
  • what was the aim of schmidt et al (2000) experiment?
    to assess the influence of retroactive interference upon the memory of street names learned during childhood
  • what was the procedure of schmidt et al (2000)?
    took 700/1700 people from a dutch neighbourhood ro participate aged 11-79
    each were sent a questionnaire , 211 responses
    it involved a map of the neighbourhood with the street names removed , participants were also asked personal questions : how often they moved ,what year,how long they stayed there forand how often they went to the neighbourhood
  • what were the findings of schmidt et al (2000)?
    the more they moved more retroactive interference occured with the street names
  • what was the conclusion of schmidt et al (2000)?
    retroactive interference seems to be able to explain forgetting in some real life situations
  • what was Abel and Braun (2013) study?
    participants were given a list of words some were asleep some awake during 12 hour wait time
    found that sleep reduced pro and retroactive interferrence
    sleep consolidates and fixes memories
  • what are key evaluation pointsto the interference theory?
    it only explains forgetting when bits of information are similar and not every day forgetting
    the reasearch tends to be laboritary
    there is no research support for other explanations of forgetting
  • what is cue dependent forgetting?
    type of forgetting based upon a faliure to rerieve the prompts that trigger recall
    only occurs when info is stillin LMT but it can't be recalled
  • what is encoding specificity principle - Tulving (1973)?
    if the context of recall is different to that of coding then recall is poor
  • what does the effectiveness of recall depend on? - CDF
    how overloaded it is
    how deep the processing of the cue was
    how well the cue fits the information associated with it
  • what are the types of CDF?
    context dependent faliure
    state dependent faliure
  • what is context dependent faliure?
    where recall occurs in a different external setting to coding
  • what is state dependent faliure?
    where recall occurs in a different internal setting to coding
  • what was Godden & Baddeley (1972) study into CDF?
    2 conditions ,studied context cues
    either given info on land or in water
    if given on land would recall on land or underwater
    if given underwater would recall underwater or on land
    if given and recalled in the same setting recall was successful
    40% lower when conditions don't match
  • what did Abernathy (1940) find out ?
    if participants completed a test in the same room they learned the information in they performed better
  • what was Overton (1972) study ?
    2 conditions studied state cues
    info was given when participants were drunk, recalled when drunk or sober
    info given when sober , recalled when sober or drunk
    when both conditions match recall was better
  • what are key evaluation points of CDF?
    most studies are labatory based
    Godden & Baddeleys findings only occured when divers had free recall items learned
    supports the levels of processing theory of memory