Our Memory System
This is the most common theory of how memory works….
OUR
SENSES
Sight, Smell,
Sound,
Taste, Touch
WORKING
MEMORY
LONG-TERM
MEMORY
Acquisition
Retrieval
Attention
Our 5 senses capture the information from
the world around us, the physical stimuli in our environments. If we pay
attention to the information collected by our senses, that information is held
in our working or short-term memory.
Our working memory temporarily holds on to the information that we are attending to, it is like our brain’s scratch pad. Working memory is where we note information from the world around us. Some of the information we keep, some we discard. Our working memory can hold information for about 20 seconds, and the information gets lost or forgotten if it is not practiced or rehearsed. For example, your friend tells you her new phone number. Usually, if you don’t write the phone number down, or repeat it over and over in your head, it is forgotten within about 10-20 seconds.
In addition, your working memory has a
limited capacity. It can usually hold between 5 and 10 chunks of information at
a time. A chunk means pieces of information that hang together in a
meaningful way.
For example:
·
7,
3, 9 are three chunks, but 739 (seven hundred
thirty-nine) is one chunk.
·
H,
O, M, E
is four chunks, but the word “home” is one chunk.
You can remember more if you separate it
into chunks.
·
1-800-547-7968
-vs-
1-800-KISS-YOU
·
FB-IM-B-AC-IAI-BMB-MW -vs- FBI-MBA-CIA-IBM-BMW
Working memory is quite vulnerable to disruption. Chances are that at some point we have all lost our train of thought during a conversation, or gone into a room to get something and forgot what it was we were looking for. This usually happens when we are distracted, and our thought or plan is “lost” from our working memory, or our brain’s scratch pad.
We can strengthen our working memory by
increasing our ability to pay attention.
If you want to remember something, and you rehearse it, or repeat it over in your head, it gets transferred from your working memory to your long-term memory. Long-term memory stores all the experiences, facts, events, skills, etc that have been transferred from your working memory. You long-term memory includes everything from the date of your best friend’s birthday to mathematical formulas you learned in school, or things like knowing how many inches in a foot, or how many litres in a gallon. Long-term memory stores words and concepts according to their meaning – which is called semantic coding. In other words, long-term memory often ignores details, but focuses instead on the general, underlying meaning of the information. Long-term memory has an unlimited capacity.
When you are trying to remember something, you are actually trying to retrieve the information from your long-term memory. Recalling information is easier if you have clues.
There are different types of long-term memory:
·
Memories of how to perform skills get engrained
in your long-term memory, and they are referred to as your procedural
memory. For example: using a typewriter, tying a shoelace. These kinds of
memories are really hardy. It might have been 30 years since you rode a bike,
but the memory comes back quickly as soon as you sit on the seat and put your
feet on the pedals. The problem with procedural memories are
they are difficult to explain to people using words. For example, it is much
easier to show a child how to tie their shoes than to explain it to them using
only words.
·
Semantic memory is more an
encyclopedia. It stores general knowledge of the world, and facts that you have
gained over a lifetime. For example, you know that a wrench is a tool and not
an animal.
·
Episodic memory refers to our
memories of specific events that happened to us. For example, remembering what
you had for breakfast, or what whether or not you took
your pills.
Examples of the distinction between procedural, semantic, and episodic memory:
·
Procedural:
You get into your red Ford and you automatically know how to drive.
·
Semantic: You know
that you have a red Ford, and that a Ford is a kind of car.
·
Episodic: You remember that you parked your car near the
entrance to Walmart in the shopping mall parking lot.