VARWWWDOC4PDFCOMTEMP253487DOC ITEMS OF MEMORY ARE LIKE PHYSICAL OBJECTS THE

VARWWWDOC4PDFCOMTEMP253487DOC ITEMS OF MEMORY ARE LIKE PHYSICAL OBJECTS THE






Items of memory are like physical objects

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Items of memory are like physical objects. The IMAGE is of a Storehouse…


Mostly accurate, like a record; may be incomplete or 2 memories can be confused, but are generally trustworthy.

Memories don’t change drastically over time (except for fading).

Simple things are easier to remember than complex (differential storage again).


Explicit, active memory events are the culture’s typical memory example– trying to store (effortful), trying to recall (typical situations -- studying for or taking a test, grocery list, other lists, remembering to do something; atypical – riding a bike, following a route, acting appropriately in class, typing, speaking)


Memory functions are controlled by “you”… by your conscious mind… what to store, what to recall. Memory is under our voluntary, conscious control.


Memory requires effort… we have to work at it (both storage and retrieval).

Repetition and rehearsal aid memory or may even be necessary for memory.


Forgetting: the culture recognizes 2 forms: loss and retrieval failure.


The culture lacks a clear distinction between storage of information and retrieval of that information. Both are called memory. (Example: did you “forget” something? If so, most people don’t ask themselves if this was a failure to store the information or a failure to retrieve the information. The response is simply “I forgot”). Try this: when someone says “I forgot” or “I can’t remember”… what do they mean? (probably either no storage or no retrieval).


For most of the examples people think of (grocery list, studying for a test) the cultural belief is that INTENTION to remember is important. It helps to INTEND and TRY to store the information.


Most of the above cultural beliefs suggest a specific image of memory. Test this IMAGE: e.g. a dark pantry or file drawer or desk drawer or large box or a junk store…


The fact that so many cultural beliefs are consistent with a couple of visual images is evidence that these images control how we think about memory… they constitute a CULTURAL THEORY of memory.

This suggests two things:

  1. the arbitrariness of these images. Why not construct other images that might do a better job of capturing the properties of memory?

  2. these images may have limited how psychologists and others have studied memory. Awareness of them can help us critically examine them and “escape” them.

  3. students in Memory & Language are free to critically examine Yates’ “theory of the cultural theory” offered here; if there are ways it inaccurately depicts the cultural view, bring them up in class or in your paper. Are there strongly-held cultural beliefs about memory that do NOT fit into the images suggested above?
















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