The functionalist agenda in memory research

J. S. Nairne
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引用次数: 18

Abstract

Memory researchers tend to focus on ‘how’ rather than ‘why’ people remember. Mnemonic effects are discovered – serial position curves, forgetting functions, spacing effects – but little is known about why memory actually works this way. Our laboratory has been investigating the functional roots of remembering, using evolution as a guiding framework. Human memory evolved subject to the constraints of nature’s criterion – differential survival and reproduction. Consequently, our capacity to remember and forget is likely tuned to solving fitness-based problems, particularly those prominent in ancestral environments. Do the operating characteristics of memory continue to bear the footprint of nature’s criterion? Are there mnemonic ‘tunings’ rooted in the remnants of a stone-age brain? Work from our laboratory suggests that (1) processing information for its survival relevance leads to superior long-term retention – better, in fact, than most known learning techniques, (2) animate (living) stimuli are remembered much better than matched inanimate (nonliving) stimuli, and (3) stimuli that have been potentially contaminated by disease are remembered especially well. Understanding how memory is used to solve adaptive problems relevant to fitness, we argue, provides critical insight into how human memory systems formed, and why they work the way they do.
记忆研究中的功能主义议程
记忆研究人员倾向于关注人们记忆的“方式”而不是“原因”。人们发现了助记效应——序列位置曲线、遗忘函数、间隔效应——但人们对记忆为何会以这种方式运作知之甚少。我们的实验室一直在研究记忆的功能根源,以进化为指导框架。人类记忆的进化受制于自然标准的约束——差异生存和繁殖。因此,我们的记忆和遗忘能力很可能是为了解决基于健康的问题,尤其是那些在祖先环境中突出的问题。记忆的运行特性是否继续承载着自然准则的足迹?记忆“调谐”是否根植于石器时代大脑的残余?我们实验室的研究表明:(1)根据信息的生存相关性来处理信息,可以获得更好的长期记忆——事实上,比大多数已知的学习技巧都要好;(2)有生命的刺激比匹配的无生命的刺激记忆得更好;(3)可能被疾病污染的刺激记忆得特别好。我们认为,理解记忆是如何被用来解决与适应性相关的适应性问题的,为了解人类记忆系统是如何形成的,以及它们为何以这样的方式工作提供了关键的见解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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