"Everyone complains of his memory, but no-one
complains of his judgment."
La Rochefoucauld
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Psyblog
 
 
 
How Memory Works: 
10 Things Most People Get Wrong
  
 
"If  we remembered everything we should on most occasions be as ill off as 
if we  remembered nothing." ~William James
It's often said that a person is the sum of their memories. Your experience 
 is what makes you who you are. 
Despite this, memory is generally poorly understood, which is why many 
people  say they have 'bad memories'. That's partly because the analogies we 
have to  hand—like that of computer memory—are not helpful. Human memory is 
vastly more  complicated and quirky than the memory residing in our laptops, 
tablets or  phones. 
Here is my 10-point guide to the psychology of memory (it is based on an 
_excellent review chapter_ 
(http://books.google.co.uk/books?hl=en&lr=&id=rI-H_gf_MCgC&oi=fnd&pg=PA1&dq=On+the+symbiosis+of+remembering,+forgetting+and+lear
ning&ots=k3-O3FS4PQ&sig=_fRduC4cilyd-Ol5
yNyJ7xhbFjQ#v=onepage&q=On%20the%20symbiosis%20of%20remembering,%20forgetting%20and%20learning&f=false)
  by the 
distinguished UCLA memory  expert, Professor Robert A. Bjork) 
1. Memory does not decay
Everyone has experienced the frustration of not being able to recall a fact 
 from memory. It could be someone's name, the French for 'town hall' or 
where the  car is parked. 
So it seems obvious that memories decay, like fruit going off. But the  
research tends not to support this view. Instead many researchers think that in 
 fact memory has a limitless capacity. Everything is stored in there but, 
without  rehearsal, memories become harder to access. This means it's not the 
memory  that's 'going off' it's the ability to retrieve it. 
But what on earth is the point of a brain that remembers everything but 
can't  recall most of it? Here's what: 
2. Forgetting helps you learn
The idea that forgetting helps you learn seems counter-intuitive, but think 
 of it this way: imagine if you created a brain that could remember and  
recall everything. When this amazing brain was trying to remember where it  
parked the car, it would immediately bring to mind all the car parks it  had 
ever seen, then it would have to sort through the lot. 
Obviously the only one that's of interest is the most recent. And this is  
generally true of most of our memories. Recent events are usually much more  
important than ones that happened a long time ago. 
To make your super-brain quicker and more useful in the real world you'd 
have  to build in some system for discounting old, useless info. In fact, of 
course,  we all have one of these super-brains with a discounting system: we 
call it  'forgetting'. 
That's why forgetting helps you learn: as less relevant information becomes 
 inaccessible, we are naturally left with the information that is most 
important  to our daily survival. 
3. 'Lost' memories can live again
There's another side to the fact that memories do not decay. That's the 
idea  that although memories may become less accessible, they can be revived. 
Even things that you have long been unable to recall are still there, 
waiting  to be woken. Experiments have shown that even information that has 
long 
become  inaccessible can still be revived. Indeed it is then re-learned more 
quickly  than new information. 
This is like the fact that you never forget how to ride a bike, but it  
doesn't just apply to motor skills, it also applies to memories. 
4. Recalling memories alters them
Although it's a fundamental of memory, the idea that recall alters memories 
 seems intuitively wrong. How can recalling a memory change it? 
Well, just by recalling a memory, it becomes stronger in comparison to 
other  memories. Let's run this through an example. Say you think back to one  
particular birthday from childhood and you recall getting a Lego spaceship. 
Each  time you recall that fact, the other things you got for your birthday 
that day  become weaker in comparison. 
The process of recall, then, is actually actively constructing the past, or 
 at least the parts of your past that you can remember. 
This is only the beginning though. False memories can potentially be 
created  by this process of falsely recalling the past. Indeed, psychologists 
have 
_experimentally  implanted false memories_ 
(http://www.spring.org.uk/2008/02/implanting-false-memories-lost-in-mall.php) . 
This raises the fascinating idea that effectively we create ourselves by  
choosing which memories to recall. 
5. Memory is unstable
The fact that the simple act of recall changes memory means that it is  
relatively unstable. But people tend to think that memory is relatively stable: 
 we forget that we forgot and so we think we won't forget in the future 
what we  now know. 
What this means is that students, in particular, vastly underestimate how  
much effort will be required to commit material to memory. And they're not 
the  only ones. This leads to... 
6. The foresight bias
Everyone must have experienced this. You have an idea that is so great you  
think it's impossible you'll ever forget it. So you don't bother writing it 
 down. Within ten minutes you've forgotten it and it never comes back. 
We see the same thing in the lab. In one study by _Koriat and  Bjork 
(2005)_ (http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/0278-7393.31.2.187)  people learned pairs of 
words like 'light-lamp', then are asked  to estimate how likely it is they'll 
be able to answer 'lamp' when later given  the prompt 'light'. They are 
massively over-confident and the reason is this  foresight bias. When they get 
the word 'light' later all kinds of other things  come to mind like 'bulb' or 
'shade' and the correct answer isn't nearly as easy  to recall as they 
predicted. 
7. When recall is easy, learning is low
We feel clever when we recall something instantly and stupid when it takes  
ages. But in terms of learning, we should feel the exact reverse. When 
something  comes to mind quickly, i.e. we do no work to recall it, no learning 
occurs. When  we have to work hard to bring it to consciousness, something 
cool happens: we  learn. 
When people's memories are tested, the more work they have done to 
construct,  or re-construct, the target memory, the stronger the memory 
eventually 
becomes.  This is why proper learning techniques always involve testing, 
because just  staring at the information isn't good enough: learning needs 
effortful  recall. 
8. Learning depends heavily on context
Have you ever noticed that when you learn something in one context, like 
the  classroom, it becomes difficult to recall when that context changes? 
This is because learning depends heavily on how and where you do it: it  
depends on who is there, what is around you and how you learn. 
It turns out that in the long-term people learn information best when they  
are exposed to it in different ways or different contexts. When learning is 
 highly context-dependent, it doesn't transfer well or stick as well over 
the  years. 
I had a friend at University who swore that standing on a chair or up 
against  a wall helped him to revise. I used to laugh at him but there was 
method 
in his  madness. 
9. Memory, reloaded
If you want to learn to play tennis, is it better to spend one week 
learning  to serve, the next week the forehand, the week after the backhand, 
and so 
on? Or  should you mix it all up with serves, forehands and backhands every 
day? 
It turns out that for long-term retention, memories are more easily 
recalled  if learning is mixed up. This is just as true for both motor 
learning, 
like  tennis, as it is for declarative memory, like what's the capital of 
Venezuela  (to save you googling: it's Caracas). 
The trouble is that learning like this is worse to start off with. If you  
practice your serve then quickly switch to the forehand, you 'forget' how to 
 serve. So you feel things are going worse than if you just practice your 
serve  over-and-over again. But, in the long-run this kind of mix-and-match 
learning  works best. 
One explanation for why this works is called the 'reloading hypothesis'. 
Each  time we switch tasks we have to 'reload' the memory. This process of 
reloading  strengthens the learning. 
10. Learning is under your control
The practical upshot of these facts about memory is that we often  
underestimate how much control we have over our own memory. 
For example, people tend to think that some things are, by their nature,  
harder to learn, and so they give up. However, techniques like using 
different  contexts, switching between tasks and strenuous reconstruction of 
memories can  all help boost retention. 
People also tend to think that the past is fixed and gone; it can't be  
changed. But how we recall the past and think about it can be changed.  
Recalling memories in different ways can help us re-interpret the past and set  
us 
off on a different path in the future. For example, studies have shown that  
people can crowd out painful negative memories by focusing on more positive 
ones  (_Levy &  Anderson, 2008_ 
(http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18242571) ). 
All in all, our memory isn't as poor as we might imagine. It may not work  
like a computer, but that's what makes it all the more fascinating to 
understand  and experience.

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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