Retrieval Failure

    Cards (14)

    • Encoding Specifity Principle states that forgetting from LTM is an accessibility issue rather than availability
    • Tulving stated that cues can aid the retrieval process as long as they were present at the aquisition stage
    • Cues are triggers of information that are encoded at the time of learning and stored with the information
    • External/Context cues are part of the environment
    • Internal/State cues are part of our own state
    • Retrieval Failure is where the information is in long-term memory but cannot be accessed
    • Context is the setting or situation in which the inormation is encoded and retrieved
    • Retrieval is more likely when the context at encoding matches the context at retrieval
    • Mood-state-dependent memory is where less forgetting occurs when the mood state at learning is the same as at retrieval
    • Godden & Baddeley (1975) investigated Context-dependent forgetting by using divers
    • The divers learnt information on land and underwater, and were then tested for retrieval in both conditions
    • Godden & Baddeley found that recall was most accurate when context matched that at aquisition
    • Carter & Cassaday (1998) investigated State-dependent forgetting by using antihistamine drugs to vary the participants mental state when learning and recalling information
    • Carter & Cassaday found that recall was more accurate when state matched that at aquisition
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