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Erasmus Universiteit Rotterdam Psychology Thinking and Remembering 2.1 Lecture Notes

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Erasmus Universiteit 2.1 Thinking and Remembering Lecture Notes 2.1 Cognitive Psychology

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2.1C Cognitive Psychology
Thinking & Remembering
Lectures
1
Atkinson and Shiffrin’s Information Processing Model
 Stimuli.
 Enters to your sensory register. (Decay and interference)
 You put attention to it, and it passes through short-term memory. (If you don’t put
attention on it > forgetting)
 Short-term memory: if you don’t rehearse it enough forgetting occurs.
 You encode that information to your long-term memory.
 You can retrieve the item and have it in your short-term memory if you rehearse it
enough. (Forgetting in long-term memory: depends on age, hippocampus gets smaller,
type of retrieval and memory strategy)
 In every step of model less amount of information goes further to your understanding.
(Bottleneck)
Attention
 From sensory register to short-term memory.
 Selective attention: a situation in which people are instructed to pay attention to
certain kinds of information while ignoring other ongoing information.
 Divided attention: a situation in which people try to pay attention to 2 or more
simultaneous messages, responding appropriately to each message. (If tasks are similar,
harder)

Short-term memory
 Keeps the information is active for a short period of time.
 You can store it under long-term memory.
Encoding
 From short-term memory/working memory to long-term memory.
 Chunking: forming groups of items according to their connections and relevance.
Retrieval
 From long-term memory to working memory where you process it further.
 Retrieval: process of recovering target information and bringing that back into the
awareness.
 Depends on encoding type (elaborate encoding), retrieval strategy, attentional cues
such as context dependence.
2
Long-term memory
 Declarative memory: long-term memory system responsible for retention of personally
experienced episodes and factual information about the world. EXPLICIT.
o Episodic memory: memory for events, experiences and situations. Memory for
personally experienced events that include contextual elements. (Time or place)
Celebrating a birthday. WHEN AND WHERE THE MEMORY HAPPENED?

, o Retrieval of episodic memory: associated with recollective experience. Reliving
the experience. (remembering the soccer game) Vulnerable to forgetting. (might
mix with other soccer games, blending)
o Semantic memory: describes one’s organized knowledge about the world that
does not include contextual elements from episodic memory. Knowing when
someone’s birthday is. WHAT IT IS?
o Retrieval of semantic memory: does not involve recollective experience.
Involves retrieval of an isolated fact. (First president of USA) Resistant to
forgetting. WHAT?
 Procedural memory: Knowing how to do things. (Riding a bike, playing an instrument)
Activation of motor memory. Even people with amnesia remembers this. INTERNAL.

Autobiographical memory
 Under episodic memory.
 Features an experience of remembering.
 Reliving the aspects of the memory. (how you kicked the ball, what you felt)
 Past events related to your personal self.
 Serves social and directive functions.
 Social and cultural context determine your memories.
Assessment methods
 Galton-Crovitz method: a word, a memory about the word.
Autobiographical retention
 Recency effect: You generally remember events that have happened sooner.
 Childhood amnesia: 0-3y: no memories because the brain is still developing. Only major
memories are remembered between age 3-5y. Sibling born, moving to another country.
 Reminiscence bump: 15-40y: more memories and more recall. cognitive peak. You
encode more. Life stability period. Firsts, important events.
o If the memories are happy & important: yes
o If the memories are traumatic & sad: no
Conway
 Retrieval of memory: life-time period (childhood) > general events (birthday parties) >
specific memories (age 5 birthday party)

Eyewitness Testimonies
 Hard to identify a person or remember an event because you were not expecting the
crime to happen.
 Guilty verdicts…
 Schema theory
o Recall involves a process in which all the relevant information is used to construct
the details of an event based on what must have been true.
o Eyewitness testimony of a bank robbery aligns with the bank robbery schema of the
witness.
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