Michael and All I've thoroughly enjoyed this discussion as well and got several examples for the topic to use in classes. But I failed to provide an answer to a question I'd asked which had to do with the original title to "Rocky Raccoon". My memory is from a class in a different life as a musician (as an undergraduate- well over 5 years ago- snicker) but I did check this online as best I could- the title was originally, "Rocky Sassoon" but was changed when they thought it didn't sound very cowboy-ish. :) Tim Shearon, The College of Idaho [email protected]
-----Original Message----- From: Michael Britt [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Thursday, December 01, 2011 5:20 AM To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS) Subject: [tips] Record Skipping memories I enjoyed the back-and-forth regarding memories for record skipping (and for the sense that a particular song ought to follow another, but doesn't because of shuffling), but did we ever get to the root of the phenomenon? It sounds like these kinds of memories are explained by: Association Expectation Encoding The only issue I have with encoding is that I assume that the song was encoded with a skip in it. I suppose that after listening to a song many, many times with the skip the song-with-skip replaces the song-without-skip memory. Anyway, interesting conversation. Michael (Britt - nothing really multicultural about me, just a middle-aged, slightly balding white guy) --- You are currently subscribed to tips as: [email protected]. To unsubscribe click here: http://fsulist.frostburg.edu/u?id=13545.bae00fb8b4115786ba5dbbb67b9b177a&n=T&l=tips&o=14542 or send a blank email to leave-14542-13545.bae00fb8b4115786ba5dbbb67b9b1...@fsulist.frostburg.edu --- You are currently subscribed to tips as: [email protected]. To unsubscribe click here: http://fsulist.frostburg.edu/u?id=13090.68da6e6e5325aa33287ff385b70df5d5&n=T&l=tips&o=14552 or send a blank email to leave-14552-13090.68da6e6e5325aa33287ff385b70df...@fsulist.frostburg.edu
