Memory Intro

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Memory Intro Essay, Research Paper

Introduction

Memory is involved in all aspects of our lives and can be thought of as the

to retain information and demonstrate retention through behaviour. We have vast

amounts of knowledge stored in our memory system which we are able to access

quickly and effortlessly, thus implying that stored knowledge must be highly

organised to allow us to retrieve the appropriate information for a given

situation. This organisation will be determined by the way that information is

encoded into memory, and the way knowledge is organised will determine the type

of process required to access that information on a future occasion.

Craick and Lockhart(1972) argued that any item entering the memory system is

analysed in stages. The early stages analyse perceptual properties of the item,

such as visual or acoustic properties. Later stages analyse its meaning,

including the categories it fits into and its connections to other items in

memory. Each level of processing leaves a trace in memory. The deeper the level

of processing, the stronger the trace and the more durable the memory.

Conversely, the shallower the level of processing, the more transitory will be

the memory.

Rowe(1974) showed that semantic encoding leads to more effective learning

than phonemic encoding, which in turn is more effective than visual encoding.

The assumption is that semantic processing is somehow a deeper sort of encoding.

Hyde and Jenkins(1973) used five different orienting tasks. Participants were

presented with lists of words for three seconds and had to complete one of the

following tasks:

1. Rate the word for pleasantness.

2. Estimate the frequency of use of the word.

3. Detect the presence of particular letters in the word.

4. Decide the appropriate part of speech of the word.

5. Make decisions as to weather or not the fits into sentence frames.

Hyde and Jenkins argued that conditions 1 & 2 required semantic

processing whereas the others did not.

Craick and Lockhart(1972) devised an incidental learning procedure in which

subjects were deliberately not asked to remember items, so that it prevented

them from processing everything in the best possible way in order to remember

them. According to Craick and Lockhart?s theory, the difference between each

level of processing is the amount of cognitive effort we expend on memorising

something. This cognitive effort is essentially the effort made in relating new

information to old. The better we can organise new material i.e. relate it to

existing knowledge, the better it will be retained.

The aim of the present study is to verify (or otherwise) the findings of

Craick and Lockhart and also to update and partially replicate their findings

about levels of processing. The present study will therefore test the hypothesis

that if words are processed acoustically or visually then they will be less

likely to be recalled than if they are processed by meaning.

Alternate hypothesis: There will be a significant association between words

which are processed acoustically or visually and whether they will be less

likely to be recalled than if they are processes by meaning.

Null hypothesis: There will be no significant association between words which

are processed acoustically or visually and whether they will be less likely to

be recalled than if they are processed by meaning.

These are one-tailed hypotheses.

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