Constructive
Processes in Memory
n Memory is also a
constructive process, in which we actively organize and shape information
as it is processed, stored, and retrieved.
“ . . . remembering is more like making
up a story than it is like reading one printed in a book.”
Constructive processing - referring to
the retrieval of memories in which those memories are altered, revised, or
influenced by newer information.
Constructive Processes in memory: which memories
are influenced by the meaning we give to events.
A key fact about
memory is that it is a constructive process in which memories are influenced
by the meaning given to what is being recalled.
Constructive Processes in Memory: Rebuilding the
Past
The constructive
processes are the processes in which memories are influenced by the meaning we
give to events. When we retrieve information, then, the memory that is produced
is affected not just by the direct prior experience we have had with the
stimulus, but also by our guesses and inferences about its meaning.
The notion that
memory is based on constructive processes was first put forward by Frederic
Bartlett, a British psychologist. He suggested that people tend to remember
information in terms of schemas, organized bodies of information stored in
(Harriett, 1932). Our reliance on schemas means that memories often consist of
a general reconstruction of previous experience. Bartlett argued that schemas
are based not only on the specific material to which people are exposed, but
also on their understanding of the situation, their expectations about the
situation, and their awareness of the motivations underlying the behavior of
others.
One of the
earliest demonstrations of schemas came from a classic study that involved a
procedure similar to the children's game of "telephone," in which
information from memory is passed sequentially from one person to another. In
the study, a participant viewed a drawing in which there were a variety of
people of differing racial and ethnic backgrounds on a subway car, one of
whom—a white person—was shown with a razor in his hand. The first participant
was asked to describe the drawing to someone else without looking back at it.
Then that person was asked to describe it to another person (without looking at
the drawing), and then the process was repeated with still one more
participant.
The report of
the last person differed in significant, yet systematic, ways from the initial
drawing. Specifically, many people described the drawing as depicting an
African American with a knife—an incorrect recollection, given that the drawing
showed a razor in the hand of a Caucasian person. The transformation of the Caucasian's
razor into an African American's knife clearly indicates that the participants
held a schema that included the unwarranted prejudice that African Americans
are more violent titan Caucasians and thus more apt to be holding a knife. In
short, our expectations and knowledge—and prejudices—affect the reliability of
our memories.
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