- Hermann Ebbinghaus
Hermann Ebbinghaus (
January 24 ,1850 –February 26 ,1909 ) was a German psychologist who pioneered the experimental study ofmemory , and is known for his discovery of theforgetting curve and thespacing effect . He was also the first person to describe thelearning curve . [Wozniak, R. H. (1999). Introduction to memory: Hermann Ebbinghaus (1885/1913). [http://psychclassics.yorku.ca/Ebbinghaus/wozniak.htm "Classics in the history of psychology"] ] He was the father of the eminent Neo-Kantian philosopherJulius Ebbinghaus .Infobox Scientist
name = Hermann Ebbinghaus
box_width =
image_width = 200px
caption = Hermann Ebbinghaus
birth_date =January 24 ,1850
birth_place =Barmen ,Germany
death_date =February 26 1909
death_place = dn|HalleDubious|date=May 2008, Germany
residence =
citizenship = German
nationality =
ethnicity =
field =psychology
work_institutions =University of Berlin ,University of Breslau University of Halle
alma_mater =
doctoral_advisor =
doctoral_students =
known_for = research onmemory
author_abbrev_bot =
author_abbrev_zoo =
influences =Gustav Fechner
influenced =Lev Vygotsky Charlotte Buhler
prizes =
religion =
footnotes =Early life
Ebbinghaus was born to
Lutheran merchants inBarmen , a German town nearBonn . At age 17, he entered theUniversity of Bonn , where he was first drawn to the study ofphilosophy . His studies were interrupted in 1870 by theFranco-Prussian War , in which he served with thePrussian army. Prior to the War, he had also briefly attended the universities of Berlin and Halle, but then had returned to the University of Bonn, where he completed his dissertation onEduard von Hartmann’s "Philosophy of the Unconscious". He received his doctorate in 1873 at the age of twenty-three.Professional career
After acquiring his
PhD , Ebbinghaus moved toBerlin , where he spent several years before leaving to travel inFrance andEngland for the next three years. In England, he may have taught in two small schools in the South of the country (Gorfein, 1985). InLondon , in a used bookstore, he came acrossGustav Fechner 's book "Elements of Psychophysics" which arguably spurred him to conduct his famous memory experiments. He began his work in 1879, but he may have performed his first set of experiments on several students from the English schools he had taught at. In 1885, the year he published his monumental work Memory: "A Contribution to Experimental Psychology" he was accepted as a professor at the university of Berlin. In Berlin, he founded the Psychological journal "Zeitschrift für Physiologie und Psychologie der Sinnesorgane" ("The Psychology and Physiology of the Sense Organs"). He also founded two psychological laboratories in Germany. His very sparse contributions to academic writing eventually cost him the seat of head of philosophy department at the university of Berlin, which ended up going toCarl Stumpf . Nevertheless, he was described as an excellent teacher and eloquent speaker. Eventually, he had begun to drift away from his colleagues, and left to join theUniversity of Breslau (nowWroclaw ,Poland ) in 1894. While inBreslau , he published a successful elementary textbook of psychology in 1908, and had also begun working on his next piece of writing "Die Grundzuge der Psychologie" ("Fundamentals of Psychology"). Before completing his third work, Ebbinghaus had died ofpneumonia in 1909 at the age of 59. At a conference later that year, prominent American psychologistEdward B. Titchener called Ebbinghaus’s death a great loss to psychology.Pioneering research on memory
In his work on memory, Ebbinghaus was determined to show that higher mental processes are not hidden from view, but instead could be studied using
experimentation . In order to simplify the procedure, Ebbinghaus wanted to use simple acoustic encoding and maintenance rehearsal for which a list of words could have been used. However, Ebbinghaus knew that prior knowledge affectedlearning , and people’s understanding of the words, and the easily formable associations between them would interfere with his results. He thus had to look for something that could be easily memorized but without any previouscognitive “baggage” attached. For these purposes he used something that would later be called “nonsensesyllables ”. A nonsense syllable is aconsonant -vowel -consonant combination, where the consonant does not repeat, and the syllable does not have any prior meaning. BOL (sounds like ‘Ball’) and DOT (already a word) would then not be allowed, but syllables like DAX, BOK and YAT would all be acceptable. After creating the possible combinations and eliminating the meaning-laden ones, Ebbinghaus wound up with 2,300 resultant syllables. Nevertheless, it has also been suggested that we may impose meaning on nonsense syllables to make them more meaningful, which would make nonsense syllable PED (which is the first three words of the word ‘pedal ’) less nonsense than a syllable like KOJ. It appears that Ebbinghaus recognized this, and only referred to the strings of syllables as “nonsense” regarding the syllables as possibly having meaning. Once he had his syllables, he would pull out a number of random syllables from a box and then write them down in a notebook. Then, to the regular sound of ametronome , and with the same voiceinflection , he would read out the syllables, and attempt torecall them at the end of the procedure. It is important to note that Ebbinghaus used himself as the only subject, attempting to regulate his daily routine in order to maintain more control over his results. He may have kept himself as the sole subject not out of convenience or ignorance but rather, because he did not want to subject anyone else to the tedious experiments. Oneinvestigation alone required 15,000 recitations.Contributions to memory
In 1885, he published his groundbreaking "Über das Gedächtnis" ("On Memory", later translated to English as "Memory. A Contribution to Experimental Psychology") in which he described experiments he conducted on himself to describe the processes of
learning andforgetting .Ebbinghaus made several findings that are still relevant and supported to this day. Firstly, his arguably most famous finding – the
forgetting curve . The forgetting curve describes theexponential curve that illustrates how fast we tend to forget the information we had learned. The sharpest decline is in the first twenty minutes, then in the first hour, and then the curve evens off after about one day.The
learning curve , which was described by Ebbinghaus, refers to how fast we learn information. The sharpest increase occurs after the first try, and gradually evens out, meaning that less and less new information is retained after each repetition. Like the forgetting curve, the learning curve is also exponential.Ebbinghaus had also documented the
serial position effect , which describes how the position of an item in the list affects the likelihood of said item being recalled. The two main concepts in the serial position curve are the recency and primacy effects. The recency effect refers to the fact that we remember the most recent information better because it is still stored in short-term memory. The primacy effect is remembering the first items in a list better due to increased rehearsal and commitment to long-term memory.The other important discovery is that of savings. Savings refers to the amount of information retained in the
subconscious even after this information had been completely forgotten (cannot be consciously accessed). To test this, Ebbinghaus would memorize a list of items until perfectrecall and then would not access the list until he could no longer recall any of its items. He then would relearn the list, and compare the new learning curve to the learning curve of his previous memorization of the list. The second list was generally memorized faster, and this difference between the two learning curves is what Ebbinghaus called “savings”.Ebbinghaus also described the difference between involuntary and voluntary memory, the former occurring “with apparent spontaneity and without any act of the will” and the latter being brought “into consciousness by an exertion of the will”.
The bulk of the work on memory prior to Ebbinghaus’s contributions centered primarily on observational description and speculation, with most of this work undertaken by philosophers. For example,
Immanuel Kant used pure description to discuss recognition and its components andSir Francis Bacon claimed that the simple observation of the rote recollection of a previously learned list was “no use to the art” of memory. This dichotomy between descriptive and experimental study of memory would resonate later in Ebbinghaus’s life, particularly in his public argument with former colleague,Wilhelm Dilthey .Ebbinghaus’s effect on memory research had been almost immediate. With very few works published on memory in the previous two millennia, Ebbinghaus’s work on memory spurred memory research in the
United States in the 1890’s, with 32 papers published in 1894 alone. This research was also coupled with the growing development of mechanizedmnemometers – various devices that aided in the recording and studying of memory, which illustrates the progress that was launched from Ebbinghaus’s work.The reaction to his work in his day was mostly positive. Noted psychologist
William James called the studies “heroic” and said that they were “the single most brilliant investigation in the history of psychology”.Edward B. Titchener also mentioned that the studies were the greatest undertaking in the topic of memory sinceAristotle .Although Ebbinghaus is generally considered the one who popularized experiments in psychology it is important to note that he was not the first one to conduct experiments in psychology.
Johann Segner , more than a century before, had invented the “Segner-wheel” to see the length of after-images by seeing how fast a wheel with a hotcoal attached would have to move in order for the red ember circle from the coal to be complete. (seeiconic memory )Other contributions
Ebbinghaus can also be credited with pioneering sentence completion exercises, which he developed in studying the abilities of schoolchildren. It were these same exercises that
Alfred Binet had borrowed and incorporated into the Binet-Simon intelligence scale. Sentence completion had since then also been used extensively in memory research, especially in tapping into measures ofimplicit memory , and also has been used inpsychotherapy as a tool to help tap into the motivations and drives of the patient. He had also influencedCharlotte Buhler , who along withLev Vygotsky and others went on to studylanguage meaning andsociety ..Ebbinghaus is also largely credited with drafting the first standard research report. In his paper on memory, Ebbinghaus arranged his research into four sections: the introduction, the methods, the results, and a discussion section. This clarity and organization of this format was so impressive to contemporaries that it has now become standard in the discipline and all research reports follow the same standards laid out by Ebbinghaus.
Unlike notable contemporaries like Titchener and James, Ebbinghaus did not promote any specific
school of psychology nor was he known for extensive lifetime research, having only done three works. He had never attempted to bestow upon himself the title of the pioneer ofexperimental psychology , did not seek to have any “disciples ”, and left the exploitation of the new field to others.Criticism
Some of the earliest criticism for Ebbinghaus’s research on memory had been that the results were dull and unremarkable. While the procedure and concept were lauded as monumental achievements, the results were “common” knowledge, and did not revolutionize contemporary opinions on memory.
In the 1960’s at the time of the birth of
cognitive psychology , a growing anti-Ebbinghaus movement had begun to take shape, specifically using him as ascapegoat for the “lack of progress” over the previous half-century. Looking at selective data, and completely ignoring or distorting facts, the picture of Ebbinghaus painted to contemporary students was described as a “farce”. It was suggested that everyday memory was beyond the grasp of the lab, making Ebbinghaus’s research and techniques obsolete. Ebbinghaus was denounced as an associationist and was blamed for psychology being “burdened” withassociationism , which manifested itself inbehaviorism . Erroneously, it was said that Ebbinghaus was a dull man that had “stripped all the meaning from his research”. The nonconstructive criticism went as far as to ignore even the most established of Ebbinghaus’s contributions. One psychologist described British psychologist Frederic Bartlett's work "Thinking" as being the first to show that higher mental processes could be studied experimentally ("ibid."), despite Ebbinghaus having shown exactly that almost a century earlier. Nevertheless, almost half a century after this discourse, Ebbinghaus is now particularly revered amongst cognitive psychologists.Discourse on the nature of psychology
In addition to pioneering experimental psychology, Ebbinghaus was also a strong defender of this direction of the new science, as is illustrated by his public dispute with University of Berlin colleague,
Wilhelm Dilthey . Shortly after Ebbinghaus left Berlin in 1893, Dilthey published a paper extolling the virtues of descriptive psychology, and condemning experimental psychology as boring, claiming that themind was too complex, and thatintrospection was the desired method of studying the mind. The debate at the time had been primarily whether psychology should aim to explain or understand the mind and whether it belonged to the natural orhuman sciences . Many had seen Dilthey’s work as an outright attack on experimental psychology, Ebbinghaus included, and he responded to Dilthey with a personal letter and also a long scathing public article. Amongst his counterarguments against Dilthey he mentioned that it is inevitable for psychology to dohypothetical work and that the kind of psychology that Dilthey was attacking was the one that existed before Ebbinghaus’s “experimental revolution”.Charlotte Buhler echoed his words some forty years later, stating that people like Ebbinghaus "buried the old psychology in the 1890’s". Ebbinghaus explained his scathing review by saying that he could not believe that Dilthey was advocating thestatus quo of structuralists likeWilhelm Wundt and Titchener and attempting to stifle psychology’s progress.Some contemporary texts still describe Ebbinghaus as a philosopher rather than a psychologist and he had also spent his life as a professor of philosophy. However, Ebbinghaus himself would probably describe himself as a psychologist considering that he fought to have psychology viewed as a separate discipline from philosophy.
Influences
There has been some speculation as to what had influenced Ebbinghaus in his undertakings. There do not appear to be any professors that had rubbed off on him, nor are there suggestions that he was affected by his colleagues. Von Hartmann’s work, that Ebbinghaus did his doctorate on, did suggest that higher mental processes were hidden from view, which probably spurred Ebbinghaus to attempt to prove otherwise. The one influence that has always been cited as inspiring Ebbinghaus was the second-hand Fechner book that he had picked up in England. It is said that the meticulous mathematical procedures impressed Ebbinghaus so much, that he wanted to do for psychology what Fechner had done for
psychophysics . This inspiration is also evident in that Ebbinghaus dedicated his second work "Fundamentals of Psychology" to Fechner, signing it “I owe everything to you”.There has also been speculation surrounding the question of how much Ebbinghaus’s love of
poetry also influenced the direction of his work. One of the studies Ebbinghaus performed looked at how memorizing his string of nonsense syllables compared to memorizing a passage fromDon Juan , suggesting that perhaps his own attempts to memorize poetry inspired him to study memory in general.References
External links
* [http://psy.ed.asu.edu/~classics/Ebbinghaus/index.htm "Memory: A Contribution to Experimental Psychology" ]
* [http://psychclassics.yorku.ca/Ebbinghaus/wozniak.htm Introduction to "Memory." by Robert H. Wozniak]
* [http://www.indiana.edu/~intell/ebbinghaus.shtml Hermann Ebbinghaus at the Human Intelligence website]
* [http://vlp.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/references?id=per311 Short biography, bibliography, and links on digitized sources] in theVirtual Laboratory of theMax Planck Institute for the History of Science
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