1 / 200

Sensory memory & Short – term memory

Sensory memory & Short – term memory . Part I พ.ญ. กาญจนา พิทักษ์วัฒนานนท์ อายุรแพทย์เฉพาะทางระบบประสาทสมอง. What is memory ?. Processes involved retaining, retrieving, using information Original information is no longer present. ความทรงจำ ( memory ) คือ

amelia
Download Presentation

Sensory memory & Short – term memory

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Sensory memory & Short – term memory Part I พ.ญ. กาญจนา พิทักษ์วัฒนานนท์ อายุรแพทย์เฉพาะทางระบบประสาทสมอง

  2. What is memory ? • Processes involved retaining, retrieving, using information • Original information is no longer present ความทรงจำ ( memory ) คือ ขบวนการทำงานของสมองที่เกี่ยวข้องกับการเก็บบันทึกจดจำข้อมูลที่เรียนรู้ใหม่ๆ การระลึกนึกถึงข้อมูลที่เคยเก็บไว้ หรือการดึงข้อมูลดังกล่าวมาใช้ในกระบวนการคิดและการทำงานต่างๆของสมอง ซึ่งข้อมูลต่างๆเหล่านี้อาจเกี่ยวกับสิ่งเร้าทั่วไป อาจเป็นภาพ เป็นเหตุการณ์ เป็นแนวคิด หรือทักษะความชำนาญในด้านต่างๆที่สมองเคยรับรู้เรียนรู้และมีประสบการณ์มาก่อน โดยสิ่งต่างๆเหล่านี้ล้วนแล้วแต่เป็นสิ่งที่เกิดขึ้นในอดีต ไม่ใช่สิ่งที่เกิดขึ้นอยู่ในช่วงขณะนั้น

  3. Memory • Time machine (mental time travel) • To go back just a moment • To the words you read at the beginning of the sentence • To go back many years • To events as early as a childhood birthday party

  4. Memory • Time machine : Mental time travel • Place you back in situation • Remember what we need to do later • Remember facts we have learned • Use skills we have acquired • Day-to-day activities

  5. Memory ความทรงจำของสมองเปรียบเหมือนเครื่องมือบันทึกข้อมูลสำหรับย้อนเวลาของสมอง ( time machine ) ทำให้สมองมีความสามารถในการย้อนกลับไปนึกถึงสิ่งที่เพิ่งจะเกิดขึ้นชั่วครู่ จนถึงสามารถย้อนกลับไปนึกถึงเหตุการณ์ในอดีตที่ผ่านไปแล้วหลายสิบปีได้ การเดินทางย้อนเวลากลับไปสู่ข้อมูลในความทรงจำของสมอง ( mental time travel ) ทำให้รู้สึกเหมือนเดินทางกลับไปอยู่ในสถานการณ์ที่มีประสบการณ์ในอดีต มีทั้งความรู้สึกนึกคิดต่างๆที่เคยเกิดขึ้นและรายละเอียดของเหตุการณ์ที่เคยได้รับรู้ จนบางครั้งเหมือนกับเหตุการณ์นั้นกำลังเกิดขึ้นอยู่อีกครั้ง ( re experiencing ) นอกจากความทรงจำของสมองจะมีประโยชน์ต่อการระลึกหรือจดจำเหตุการณ์ที่ผ่านมาในอดีตแล้ว ยังมีความสำคัญอย่างมากต่อการใช้ชีวิตประจำวันอีกด้วย ไม่ว่าจะเป็นการจดจำสิ่งที่จะต้องทำในแต่ละวัน หรือแม้แต่กิจวัตรประจำวันเช่นการอาบน้ำแปรงฟันแต่งตัวก็ยังต้องใช้ความสามารถด้านความทรงจำของสมองที่ทำให้เกิดการเรียนรู้และความชำนาญในการทำกิจกรรมต่างๆด้วย

  6. Create a “Top 10 list” of : What you use memory for ? Student top 5 items : • Material for exams • Their daily schedule • Names • Phone numbers • Directions to places

  7. Top 10 list of purposeswhat you use memory for… Answer : Differ from the ones to the others • Student : material for exams • Construction worker : framing a house • Homemaker : cleaning the house • Business executive : ??? • Politicians : ???

  8. Top 10 list of purposeswhat you use memory for… • Most : Day-to-day activities • Labeling familiar objects : “ Book ” is ?? • Having conversations : talking , Q & A • Knowing what to do in restaurant : paying check • Finding the way to somewhere : map

  9. How important of memory.. • When people lose their memory.. • What happens to people’s lives.. For example : Clive Wearing

  10. Clive Wearing • Musician & choral director in England • Viral encephalitis : destroyed temporal lobe • Cannot forming new memories ( LTM ) • Remember what just happen • Then forget everything else • Problem : he react like 1st meet when he meet someone in a few minutes again

  11. Clive Wearing’s diary • He has no memory of ever writing anything except for the sentence he has just written • He is confused • He record events in his handwriting • He has no memory for writing events • He denies that events are his

  12. Important of memory • Wearing lives totally within a few minutes • He describes his life as being “like death” • He has no ability to have normal life • He cannot participate in life in any meaningful way • He need to be constantly cared for by others

  13. Chapter summery 1 • Memory is the process involved in retaining, retrieving, and using information about stimuli, images, events, ideas, and skills after the original information is no longer present. • It is important for dealing with day-to-day events, and cases such as Clive Wearing’s illustrate the importance of memory for normal functioning.

  14. basic principles of memory : The modal model of memory • Richard Atkinson & Richard Shiffrin’ s : 1968 • Proposed 40 years ago

  15. Stages of modal model • Called structural features of the model • There are 3 major structural features • Sensory memory • Short-term memory • Long-term memory

  16. Structural features 1 sensory memory • Initial stage • Holds all incoming information for seconds or fractions of a second 2 short-term memory : STM • Holds 5-7 items for about 15-20 seconds. 3 long-term memory : LTM • Hold a large amount of information for years or even decades.

  17. Control processes • Active processes that can be controlled by the person and may differ from one task to another. • For example: Rehearsal , Attention , Relating

  18. Rehearsal • Repeating a stimulus over and over • You might repeat a telephone number in order to hold it in your mind after looking it up in the phone book.

  19. Attention • You selectively focus on other information you want to remember

  20. Relating • Relating the numbers in a phone number to a familiar date in history

  21. Phone number for Mineo’s Pizza • Rachel looks up the number in a phone book • All of the information that enters her eyes is registered in sensory memory. • Rachel focuses on the number for Mineo’s pizza using the control process of selective attention, so the number enters STM • Rachel uses the control process of rehearsal to keep it there

  22. Phone number for Mineo’s Pizza • After Rachel has dialed the phone number • She may forget it because it has not been transferred into long-term memory. • She decides to memorize the number so next time she won’t have to look it up in thephone book. • Transfers the number into LTM

  23. Phone number for Mineo’s Pizza • A few days later, • When Rachel’s urge for pizza returns, she remembers the number. • The information must be retrieved from LTM so it can reenter STM to be used.

  24. Chapter summery 2 • Atkinson and Shiffrin’s modal model of memory consists of three structural features – sensory memory, short-term memory, and long-term memory. • Another feature of the model is control process such as rehearsal and attentional strategies.

  25. Sensory memory • Sensory memory is the retention, • forbrief periods of time, • of the effects of sensory stimulation. • Example : Brief retention for the effects of visual stimulation • The trail left by a moving sparkler • The experience of seeing a film

  26. The sparkler’s trial • A sparkler can cause a trail of light when it moved rapidly. • The lighted trail is a creation of your mind, which retains a perception of the sparkler’s light for a fraction of a second. • This retention of the perception of light in your mind is called the persistence of vision.

  27. Projector’s shutter A person viewing the film • sees the progression of still images as movement • doesn’t see the dark intervals between the images because the persistence of vision fills in the darkness by retaining the image of previous frame.

  28. Flickers of film • The period between the images is too long (more than 24 times/sec.) • Longer dark interval • The mind can’t fill in the darkness completely • A person perceive a flickering effect

  29. Sperling’s experiment :Measuring the visual icon • Icon = image • An array of letters (12 icon in matrix) • Flashed on the screen for 50 ms. • 50 ms = 50/1000 sec. • Asked participants to report a whole XMLT AFNB CDZP

  30. Sperling’s experiment :Measuring the visual icon The whole report method • They were able to report an average of 4.5 out of the 12 letters • Concluded ??? : the exposure was brief, participants saw only an average of 4.5 of the 12 letters • Perhaps ??? : participants saw most of the letters immediately, but their perception faded rapidly

  31. Sperling’s experiment :Measuring the visual icon Determine which of 2 possibilities is correct • Partial report method • Flashed the matrix for 50 ms • Immediately after it was flashed (turned off) • Sounded one of the following cues tones • High pitched : top row • Medium-pitched : middle row • Low-pitched : bottom row • To indicate which row of letters the participants were to report

  32. Sperling’s experiment :Measuring the visual icon Partial report method • Sound after flashed off • Actual letters were no longer present • Participant’s attention was directed not to the actual letters • Participant’s attention was directedto whatever trace remained in their mind • Cues tones directed participants to focus their attention onto one of the rows

  33. Sperling’s experiment :Measuring the visual icon Partial report method • Result : they correctly reported an average of about 3.3 of the 4 letters (82 %) • Conclude : they saw 82% of letters They were not able to reportall of these letters because they rapidly faded as the initial letters were being reported

  34. Sperling’s experiment :Measuring the visual icon To determine the time course of this fading • Delayed partial report method • The presentation of cue tones was delayed for a fraction of a second after the letters were extinguished • Result : delayed for ½ second  report only slightly more than 1 letter in a row • Result : same number of whole report method

  35. Sperling’s experiment • Immediately after flashed off • All or most (82%) of stimulus is available for perception • This is sensory memory • Sensory memory registers all or most of the information that hits our visual receptors

  36. Sperling’s experiment • Over the next second after flashed off • Sensory memory fades • Information decays within less than second

  37. Sperling’s experiment • A short-lived sensory memory registers all or most of the information that hits our visual receptors • Capacity of sensory memory = large • but that this information decays within less than a second. • Duration of sensory memory = brief

  38. Duration of sensory memory • Sensory memory for visual stimuli • Iconic memory = visual icon • Persistence of vision • Duration less than one second • Sensory memory for auditory stimuli • Echoic memory • Persistence of sound • Duration lasts for a few second

  39. Important of sensory memory • Collecting information to be processed • Holding the information briefly while initial processing is going on • Filling in the blanks when stimulation is intermittent

  40. Chapter summery 3 • Sperling used two methods, whole report and partial report, to determine the capacity and time course of visual sensory memory. • The duration of visual sensory memory (iconic memory) is less than 1 second, • The duration of auditory sensory memory (echoic memory) is about 2-4 seconds.

  41. Short-term memory • Brief duration • What is the duration of STM ? • Most of information is lost • How much information can STM hold ? • Some of information store to be long-term memory

  42. Short-term memory • Whatever you are thinking about right now, or remember from what you just read, is in your STM • How do we understand this sentence ? “The human brain is involved in everything we know about the important things in life, like music and dancing”

  43. What is duration of STM ? • John Brown , Lloyd Peterson , Margaret Peterson : experiments to determine the duration of STM • Remembering three letters • Tell the person that you are going to read three letters followed by a number • Once the person hears the number he should start counting backward by 3’s from that number • When say Recall : write down the three letters heardat the beginning • Once the person start counting, • time 20 seconds and say “Recall”

More Related