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You are playing a game of Trivial Pursuit, and winning the game comes down to
one question: On what body of water is Mumbai located? As
you rack your brain
for the answer, several fundamental processes relating to memory come into play.
You may never, for instance, have been exposed to information regarding Mumbai’s
location. Or if you have been exposed to it, it may simply not have registered in a
meaningful way.
In other words, the information might not have been recorded prop-
erly in your memory. The initial process of recording information in a form usable
to memory, a process called
encoding, is the fi rst stage in remembering something.
Even if you had been exposed to the information and originally knew the name
of the body of water, you may still be unable to recall it
during the game because of
a failure to retain it. Memory specialists speak of
storage, the maintenance of material
saved in memory. If the material is not stored adequately, it cannot be recalled later.
Memory also depends on one last process—
retrieval : Material in memory storage has
to be located and brought into awareness to be useful. Your failure to recall Mumbai’s
location, then, may rest on your inability to retrieve information that you learned earlier.
In sum, psychologists consider
memory to be
the process by which we encode,
store, and retrieve information (see Figure 1). Each of the three parts of this defi nition—
encoding, storage, and retrieval—represents a different process. You can think of these
processes as being analogous to a computer’s keyboard (encoding), hard drive (storage),
and software that accesses the information for display on the screen (retrieval). Only if
all three processes have operated will you experience success and be able to recall the
body of water on which Mumbai is located: the Arabian Sea.
Recognizing that memory involves encoding, storage, and retrieval gives us a start
in understanding the concept. But how does memory actually function? How do we
explain what information
is initially encoded, what gets stored, and how it is retrieved?
According to the
three-system approach to memory that dominated memory research
for several decades, there are different memory storage systems or stages through
which information must travel if it is to be remembered (Atkinson & Shiffrin, 1968,
1971).
Historically, the approach has been extremely infl uential in the development
of our understanding of memory, and—although new theories have augmented it—
it still provides a useful framework for understanding how information is recalled.
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