module 24 Preview

Although some types of information are encoded automatically, other types, including information involving meaning, imagery, and organization, require effort. Mnemonic devices that use imagery and that organize information into chunks aid memory. Organizing into hierarchies also helps.

General Instructional Objectives

1. To describe how we encode information.

2. To describe what we encode.

module Guide

How We Encode

1. Distinguish between automatic and effortful processing, and discuss the importance of rehearsal.

To some extent, encoding occurs automatically. With little or no effort, we encode an enormous amount of information about space, time, and frequency. For example, we can recreate a sequence of the day’s events in order to guess where we might have left a coat. Automatic processing occurs without our awareness and without interfering with our thinking about other things.

Other types of information require attention and effort (effortful processing). For example, our memory of a new telephone number will disappear unless we work to maintain it in consciousness. Rehearsal, or conscious repetition, is a valuable aid to retention. The spacing effect indicates that rehearsal yields better long-term retention if learning is distributed. A further illustration of the benefits of rehearsal is demonstrated by the serial position effect: In learning a list, people often remember the last and first items better than the middle items.

Exercise: Serial Position Effect in Recalling U.S. Presidents

Transparencies: 105 Ebbinghaus’s Retention Curve; 106 The Serial Position Effect

What We Encode

2. Explain the importance of meaning, imagery, and organization in the encoding process.

When processing verbal information for storage, we usually encode its meaning. For example, we associate it with what we already know or imagine. Research indicates that semantic encoding (of meaning) yields better memory of verbal information than acoustic encoding (of sound) or visual encoding (of an image). This research also highlights the futility of trying to remember words we do not understand and the benefits of rephrasing what we read and hear into meaningful terms.

Exercises: Visually Versus Auditorily Encoded Information; The Self-Reference Effect

Transparency: 107 Type of Encoding Affects Word Recognition

In a variety of experiments, researchers have documented the benefits of mental imagery. For example, people who form the most vivid visual images of strangers also remember them best. Imagery is at the heart of many memory aids, or mnemonic devices such as the “method of loci” and the “peg-word” system.

When we organize information into meaningful units, we recall it more easily. Chunking occurs so naturally that we often take it for granted. When people develop expertise in an area, they often process information in hierarchies composed of a few broad concepts divided and subdivided into lesser concepts and facts. In this way, experts can retrieve information efficiently.

Exercises: Meaning and Memory; Semantic Encoding of Pictures; Chunking

Lecture: Mnemonic Devices; The Keyword Method

Transparency: 108 Effects of Chunking on Memory