User Contributed Dictionary
Pronunciation
Noun
memories- Plural of memory
Extensive Definition
In psychology, memory is an
organism's ability to store, retain, and subsequently retrieve
information. Traditional studies of memory began in the realms of
philosophy, including
techniques of artificially
enhancing the memory. The late nineteenth and early twentieth
century put memory within the paradigms of cognitive
psychology. In recent decades, it has become one of the
principal pillars of a branch of science called cognitive
neuroscience, an interdisciplinary link between cognitive
psychology and neuroscience.
Processes
There are several ways to classify memories,
based on duration, nature and retrieval of information. From an
information processing perspective there are three main stages in
the formation and retrieval of memory:
Classification
A basic and generally accepted classification of
memory is based on the duration of memory retention, and identifies
three distinct types of memory: sensory
memory, short
term memory and long term
memory.
Sensory
Sensory memory corresponds approximately to the
initial 200 - 500 milliseconds after an item
is perceived. The ability to look at an item, and remember what it
looked like with just a second of observation, or memorization, is
an example of sensory memory. With very short presentations,
participants often report that they seem to "see" more than they
can actually report. The first experiments exploring this form of
sensory memory were conducted by George
Sperling using the "partial report paradigm." Subjects were
presented with a grid of 12 letters, arranged into three rows of 4.
After a brief presentation, subjects were then played either a
high, medium or low tone, cuing them which of the rows to report.
Based on these partial report experiments, Sperling was able to
show that the capacity of sensory memory was approximately 12
items, but that it degraded very quickly (within a few hundred
milliseconds). Because this form of memory degrades so quickly,
participants would see the display, but be unable to report all of
the items (12 in the "whole report" procedure) before they decayed.
This type of memory cannot be prolonged via rehearsal.
Short-term
Some of the information in sensory memory is then
transferred to short-term memory. Short-term memory allows one to
recall something from several seconds to as long as a minute
without rehearsal. Its capacity is also very limited: George
A. Miller, when working at Bell Laboratories, conducted
experiments showing that the store of short term memory was 7±2
items (the title of his famous paper, "The
magical number 7±2"). Modern estimates of the capacity of
short-term memory are lower, typically on the order of 4-5 items,
and we know that memory capacity can be increased through a process
called chunking. For
example, if presented with the string:
- FBIPHDTWAIBM
people are able to remember only a few items.
However, if the same information is presented in the following
way:
- FBI PHD TWA IBM
people can remember a great deal more letters.
This is because they are able to chunk the information into
meaningful groups of letters. Beyond finding meaning in the
abbreviations above, Herbert
Simon showed that the ideal size for chunking letters and
numbers, meaningful or not, was three. This may be reflected in
some countries in the tendency to remember phone numbers as several
chunks of three numbers with the final four-number groups generally
broken down into two groups of two.
Short-term memory is believed to rely mostly on
an acoustic code for storing information, and to a lesser extent a
visual code. Conrad (1964) found that test subjects had more
difficulty recalling collections of words that were acoustically
similar (e.g. dog, hog, fog, bog, log).
Long-term
The storage in sensory memory and short-term memory generally have a strictly limited capacity and duration, which means that information is available for a certain period of time, but is not retained indefinitely. By contrast, long-term memory can store much larger quantities of information for potentially unlimited duration (sometimes a whole life span). For example, given a random seven-digit number, we may remember it for only a few seconds before forgetting, suggesting it was stored in our short-term memory. On the other hand, we can remember telephone numbers for many years through repetition; this information is said to be stored in long-term memory. While short-term memory encodes information acoustically, long-term memory encodes it semantically: Baddeley (1966) discovered that after 20 minutes, test subjects had the least difficulty recalling a collection of words that had similar meanings (e.g. big, large, great, huge).Short-term memory is supported by transient
patterns of neuronal communication, dependent on regions of the
frontal
lobe (especially dorsolateral prefrontal cortex) and the
parietal
lobe. Long-term memories, on the other hand, are maintained by
more stable and permanent changes in neural connections widely
spread throughout the brain. The hippocampus is essential to
the consolidation of information from short-term to long-term
memory, although it does not seem to store information itself.
Rather, it may be involved in changing neural connections for a
period of three months or more after the initial learning.
One of the primary functions of sleep is
improving consolidation of information, as it can be shown that
memory depends on getting sufficient sleep between training and
test, and that the hippocampus replays activity from the current
day while sleeping.
Models
Models of memory provide abstract representations of how memory is believed to work. Below are several models proposed over the years by various psychologists. Note that there is some controversy as to whether there are several memory structures, for example, Tarnow (2005) finds that it is likely that there is only one memory structure between 6 and 600 seconds.Multi-store (Atkinson-Shiffrin memory model)
The multi-store model (also known as Atkinson-Shiffrin memory model) was first recognised in 1968 by Atkinson and Shiffrin.The multi-store model has been criticized for
being too simplistic. For instance, long-term memory is believed to
be actually made up of multiple subcomponents, such as episodic and
procedural memory. It also proposes that rehearsal is the only
mechanism by which information eventually reaches long-term
storage, but evidence shows us capable of remembering things
without rehearsal.
(See also: Memory
consolidation)
Working memory
In 1974 Baddeley and Hitch proposed a
working memory model which replaced the concept of general
short term memory with specific, active components. In this model,
working memory consists of three basic stores: the central
executive, the phonological loop and the visuo-spatial sketchpad.
In 2000 this model was expanded with the multimodal episodic
buffer.
The central executive essentially acts as
attention. It channels information to the three component
processes: the phonological loop, the visuo-spatial sketchpad, and
the episodic buffer.
The phonological loop stores auditory information
by silently rehearsing sounds or words in a continuous loop; the
articulatory process (the "inner voice") continuously "speaks" the
words to the phonological store (the "inner ear"). The phonological
loop has a very limited capacity, which is demonstrated by the fact
that it is easier to remember a list of short words (e.g. dog,
wish, love) than a list of long words (e.g. association,
systematic, confabulate) because short words fit better in the
loop. However, if the test subject is given a task that ties up the
articulatory process (saying "the, the, the" over and over again),
then a list of short words is no easier to remember.
The visuo-spatial sketchpad stores visual and
spatial information. It is engaged when performing spatial tasks
(such as judging distances) or visual ones (such as counting the
windows on a house or imagining images).
The episodic buffer is dedicated to linking
information across domains to form integrated units of visual,
spatial, and verbal information and chronological ordering (e.g.,
the memory of a story or a movie scene). The episodic buffer is
also assumed to have links to long-term memory and semantical
meaning.
The working memory model explains many practical
observations, such as why it is easier to do two different tasks
(one verbal and one visual) than two similar tasks (e.g., two
visual), and the aforementioned word-length effect. However, the
concept of a central executive as noted here has been criticized as
inadequate and vague.
Levels of processing
Craik and Lockhart (1972) proposed that it is the
method and depth of processing that affects how an experience is
stored in memory, rather than rehearsal.
- Organization - Mandler (1967) gave participants a pack of word cards and asked them to sort them into any number of piles using any system of categorization they liked. When they were later asked to recall as many of the words as they could, those who used more categories remembered more words. This study suggested that the act of organizing information makes it more memorable.
- Distinctiveness - Eysenck and Eysenck (1980) asked participants to say words in a distinctive way, e.g. spell the words out loud. Such participants recalled the words better than those who simply read them off a list.
- Effort - Tyler et al. (1979) had participants solve a series of anagrams, some easy (FAHTER) and some difficult (HREFAT). The participants recalled the difficult anagrams better, presumably because they put more effort into them.
Classification by information type
Anderson (1976) divides long-term memory into declarative (explicit) and procedural (implicit) memories.Declarative
memory requires conscious recall, in that some
conscious process must call back the information. It is sometimes
called explicit
memory, since it consists of information that is explicitly
stored and retrieved.
Declarative memory can be further sub-divided
into semantic
memory, which concerns facts taken independent of context; and
episodic
memory, which concerns information specific to a particular
context, such as a time and place. Semantic memory allows the
encoding of abstract knowledge about the world,
such as "Paris is the capital of France". Episodic memory, on the
other hand, is used for more personal memories, such as the
sensations, emotions, and personal associations of a particular
place or time. Autobiographical
memory - memory for particular events within one's own life -
is generally viewed as either equivalent to, or a subset of,
episodic memory. Visual
memory is part of memory preserving some characteristics of our
senses pertaining to visual experience. One is able to place in
memory information that resembles objects, places, animals or
people in sort of a mental image. Visual memory can result in
priming
and it is assumed some kind of perceptual representational system
underlies this phenomenon. http://moodle.ed.uiuc.edu/wiked/index.php/Memory%2C_visual
In contrast, procedural
memory (or implicit
memory) is not based on the conscious recall of information,
but on implicit
learning. Procedural memory is primarily employed in learning motor
skills and should be considered a subset of implicit memory. It is
revealed when one does better in a given task due only to
repetition - no new explicit memories have been formed, but one is
unconsciously
accessing aspects of those previous experiences. Procedural memory
involved in motor
learning depends on the cerebellum and basal
ganglia.
So far, nobody has been able to successfully
isolate the time dependence of these suggested memory
structures.
Classification by temporal direction
A further major way to distinguish different memory functions is whether the content to be remembered is in the past, retrospective memory, or whether the content is to be remembered in the future, prospective memory. Thus, retrospective memory as a category includes semantic memory and episodic/autobiographical memory. In contrast, prospective memory is memory for future intentions, or remembering to remember (Winograd, 1988). Prospective memory can be further broken down into event- and time-based prospective remembering. Time-based prospective memories are triggered by a time-cue, such as going to the doctor (action) at 4pm (cue). Event-based prospective memories are intentions triggered by cues, such as remembering to post a letter (action) after seeing a mailbox (cue). Cues do not need to be related to the action (as the mailbox example is), and lists, sticky-notes, knotted handkerchiefs, or string around the finger are all examples of cues that are produced by people as a strategy to enhance prospective memory.Physiology
Overall, the mechanisms of memory are not completely understood. Brain areas such as the hippocampus, the amygdala, the striatum, or the mammillary bodies are thought to be involved in specific types of memory. For example, the hippocampus is believed to be involved in spatial learning and declarative learning, while the amygdala is thought to be involved in emotional memory. Damage to certain areas in patients and animal models and subsequent memory deficits is a primary source of information. However, rather than implicating a specific area, it could be that damage to adjacent areas, or to a pathway traveling through the area is actually responsible for the observed deficit. Further, it is not sufficient to describe memory, and its counterpart, learning, as solely dependent on specific brain regions. Learning and memory are attributed to changes in neuronal synapses, thought to be mediated by long-term potentiation and long-term depression.Hebb distinguished between short-term and
long-term memory. He postulated that any memory that stayed in
short-term storage for a long enough time would be consolidated
into a long-term memory. Later research showed this to be false.
Research has shown that direct injections of cortisol or
epinephrine help the storage of recent experiences. This is also
true for stimulation of the amygdala. This proves that excitement
enhances memory by the stimulation of hormones that affect the
amygdala. Excessive or prolonged stress (with prolonged cortisol)
may hurt memory storage. Patients with amygdalar damage are no more
likely to remember emotionally charged words than nonemotionally
charged ones. The hippocampus is important for explicit memory. The
hippocampus is also important for memory consolidation. The
hippocampus receives input from different parts of the cortex and
sends its output out to different parts of the brain also. The
input comes from secondary and tertiary sensory areas that have
processed the information a lot already. Hippocampal damage may
also cause memory loss and problems with memory storage.
Disorders
Much of the current knowledge of memory has come from studying memory disorders. Loss of memory is known as amnesia. There are many sorts of amnesia, and by studying their different forms, it has become possible to observe apparent defects in individual sub-systems of the brain's memory systems, and thus hypothesize their function in the normally working brain. Other neurological disorders such as Alzheimer's disease can also affect memory and cognition. Hyperthymesia, or hyperthymesic syndrome, is a disorder which affects an individual's autobiographical memory, essentially meaning that they cannot forget small details that otherwise would not be stored.While not a disorder, a common temporary failure
of word retrieval from memory is the tip-of-the-tongue
phenomenon. Sufferers
of Nominal Aphasia (also called Anomia), however, do
experience the Tip of the Tongue phenomenon on an ongoing basis due
to damage to the frontal and parietal lobes of the brain.
Impaired memory can be a symptom of hypothyroidism.
Memorization
Memorization is a method of learning that allows an individual to recall information verbatim. Rote learning is the method most often used. Methods of memorizing things have been the subject of much discussion over the years with some writers, such as Cosmos Rossellius using visual alphabets. The spacing effect shows that an individual is more likely to remember a list of items when rehearsal is spaced over an extended period of time. In contrast to this is cramming which is intensive memorization in a short period of time. Also relevant is the Zeigarnik effect which states that people remember uncompleted or interrupted tasks better than completed ones.In March 2007 German researchers found they could
use odors to re-activate new memories in the brains of people while
they slept and the volunteers remembered better later.
Tony Noice, an actor, director, teacher and
cognitive researcher, and his psychologist wife Helga, have studied
how actors remember lines and found that their techniques can be
useful to non-actors as well.
At the Center for Cognitive Science at The
Ohio
State University,
researchers have found that memory accuracy of adults is hurt by
the fact that they know more than children and tend to apply this
knowledge when learning new information. The findings appeared in
the August 2004 edition of the journal Psychological Science.
Improving memory
The best way to improve memory seems to be to increase the supply of oxygen to the brain, which may be accomplished with aerobic exercises; walking for three hours each week suffices, as does swimming or bicycle riding.Ageing with Grace.David Snowden, 2001, 4th Estate, London.Such aerobic exercises have helped elderly people
switch between mental tasks, concentrate better, and improve
short-term memory.(see Ageing with Grace, cited above). Exercise
increases the number of connections between neurons, which is
responsible for improved memory.
The International Longevity Center http://www.ilcusa.org/ released in
2001 a report http://www.ilcusa.org/_lib/pdf/isoa.pdf
which includes in pages 14-16 recommendations for keeping the mind
in good functionality until advanced age. Some of the
recommendations are to stay intellectually active through learning,
training or reading, to keep physically active so to promote blood
irrigation to the brain, to socialize, to reduce stress, to keep
sleep time regular, to avoid depression or emotional instability
and to observe good nutrition.
Memory Tasks
- Paired Associate Learning - when one learns to associate one specific word with another. For example when given a word such as "safe" one must learn to say another specific word, such as green. This is stimulus and response.
- Free Recall- during this task a subject would be asked to study a list of words and then sometime later they will be asked to recall or write down as many words that they can remember.
- Recognition- subjects are asked to remember a list of words or pictures, after which point they are asked to identify the previously presented words or pictures from among a list of alternatives that were not presented in the original list.
Cultural references
- Marcel Proust's novels deal extensively with memory.
- The independent film Memento emulates the experience anterograde amnesia (that is, of not being able to convert short-term memories into long-term memories).
- In 1993 taxi driver Tom Morton, who knew over 16,000 telephone numbers in Lancashire, beat the British Olympia Telephone Exchange computer with his recall while being interviewed by Esther Rantzan and Adrain Mills on the Popular BBC magazine Programme That's Life!. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/63006.stm
- The short stories of Philip K. Dick and the movies based on those works deal extensively with the nature of memory and the consequences to society if memories can be artificially generated.
- Strange Days is a film about memory. New technology allows people to record all the sensory data associated with their experiences. Playing back one of these recordings is like exactly reliving moments. Lenny, the character played by Ralph Fiennes, has a storyline revolving around memories.
- Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind is a film that deals with the meanings of love and memory when main character Joel gets the memories of his ex-girlfriend Clementine erased by fictitious company Lacuna.
- "Funes el memorioso" is a short story by Argentinian writer Jorge Luis Borges. It tells the story of Funes, who remembers every tiny detail of everything he observes or thinks and is unable to forget anything.
- The Animus in the video game Assassin's Creed extracts memories from the DNA of the user, passed on from descendant to descendant, allowing the user to replay those memories as if he were there himself.
See also
- Memory and aging
- Autobiographical memory
- Cellular memory
- Cultural memory
- Eidetic memory
- Emotion and memory
- Episodic memory
- False memory
- Forgetting curve
- Genetic memory
- Involuntary memory
- List of memory biases
- Memory inhibition
- Memory-prediction framework
- Method of loci
- Mnemonic
- Muscle memory
- Synaptic plasticity
Notes
References
- Cardwell, Mike & Flanagan, Cara. (2005). Psychology AS: The Complete Companion. ISBN 978-0748794638.
- Costa-Mattioli, Mauro. (2007). eIF2α Phosphorylation Bidirectionally Regulates the Switch from Short- to Long-Term Synaptic Plasticity and Memory. Cell, Vol 129, 195-206, 6 April.
External links
- The Works of Endel Tulving
- Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry
- Memory-related resources from the National Institutes of Health.
- Scientific American Magazine (February 2005 Issue) Making Memories Stick
- Aristotle's On Memory and Reminiscence
- The World Memory Sports Council Information about the World Memory Championships
- Learning & Memory - online, peer-reviewed journal with many free access articles
- WNYC - Radio Lab: Memory and Forgetting Show #304 Friday, June 8, 2007
- Learning disabilities and memory
memories in Arabic: ذاكرة (بيولوجيا)
memories in Guarani: Mandu'a
memories in Belarusian (Tarashkevitsa):
Памяць
memories in Bulgarian: Памет
memories in Catalan: Memòria humana
memories in Czech: Paměť (psychologie)
memories in Danish: Hukommelse
memories in German: Gedächtnis
memories in Estonian: Mälu
memories in Spanish: Memoria humana
memories in Esperanto: Memoro
memories in French: Mémoire (sciences
humaines)
memories in Korean: 기억
memories in Croatian: Pamćenje
memories in Indonesian: Memori
memories in Icelandic: Minni
memories in Italian: Memoria (fisiologia)
memories in Hebrew: זיכרון
memories in Kurdish: Bîrkan
memories in Lithuanian: Atmintis
memories in Hungarian: Emlékezet
memories in Dutch: Geheugen (mens)
memories in Japanese: 記憶
memories in Norwegian: Hukommelse
memories in Polish: Pamięć człowieka
memories in Portuguese: Memória
memories in Romanian: Memorie
memories in Quechua: Yuyay
memories in Russian: Память
memories in Albanian: Kujtesa
memories in Simple English: Memory
memories in Slovenian: Spomin
memories in Finnish: Muisti
memories in Swedish: Minne
memories in Turkish: İnsan belleği
memories in Ukrainian: Пам'ять
memories in Yiddish: זכרון
memories in Chinese: 記憶