outreach:formsofforgetting
Differences
This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.
Both sides previous revisionPrevious revisionNext revision | Previous revision | ||
outreach:formsofforgetting [2023/07/16 14:58] – [Trace Decay] ohardt | outreach:formsofforgetting [2024/07/23 14:15] (current) – ohardt | ||
---|---|---|---|
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
====== Forgetting processes ====== | ====== Forgetting processes ====== | ||
- | There are two phases in research on forgetting. | + | There are two phases in research on forgetting. |
This view changed during the second phase, marked by discoveries of mechanisms in the brain dedicated to erase memories. | This view changed during the second phase, marked by discoveries of mechanisms in the brain dedicated to erase memories. | ||
Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
===== Classic Terminology ===== | ===== Classic Terminology ===== | ||
- | One of the first classifications of forgetting stems from the Renaissance scholar Juan Luis Vives (1493-1540), | + | One of the first classifications of forgetting stems from the Renaissance scholar Juan Luis Vives (1493-1540), |
==== Consolidation Error ==== | ==== Consolidation Error ==== | ||
Line 16: | Line 16: | ||
Much of memory research in the neurosciences in the past century was devoted to better understand the memory consolidation process. | Much of memory research in the neurosciences in the past century was devoted to better understand the memory consolidation process. | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
==== Trace Decay ==== | ==== Trace Decay ==== | ||
- | The idea that memories result from structural changes has been proposed | + | The idea that memories result from structural changes has been proposed by Plato. Using the analogy of a wax tablet, he argued that memories are akin to markings engraved on malleable, plastic matter. |
- | In 1913, Edward Thorndike suggested trace decay as a reason why we forget. | + | In 1913, Edward Thorndike suggested trace decay as a reason why we forget. |
Quickly, however, Thorndike' | Quickly, however, Thorndike' | ||
- | Despite these arguments, in the 1980s Bjork and Bjork reformulated trace decay theory in form of a new theory of disuse. They argued that there are two probabilities that need to be considered to understand why we cannot remember something. | + | Despite these arguments, in the 1990s Bjork and Bjork reformulated trace decay theory in form of a new theory of disuse. They argued that there are two probabilities that need to be considered to understand why we cannot remember something. |
Yet, trace decay theory never gained popularity in cognitive psychology and outcomes of empirical studies have often been interpreted as evidence against this explanation for forgetting. | Yet, trace decay theory never gained popularity in cognitive psychology and outcomes of empirical studies have often been interpreted as evidence against this explanation for forgetting. |
outreach/formsofforgetting.1689533930.txt.gz · Last modified: 2023/07/16 14:58 by ohardt