Chapter 2.4 - The working memory model Flashcards
What is the working memory model?
A representation of short-term memory
- Suggests that STM is a dynamic processor of different types of information using subunits co-ordinated by a central decision-making system
Draw the working memory model
:)
What is the central executive?
The component of the WMM that co-ordinates the activities of the three subsystems in memory. It also allocated processing resources to those activities
- Top hat
What is the phonological loop?
The component of the WMM that processes information in terms of sound. It’s divided into the phonological store(words/sounds) and the articulatory process(allows words/sounds to be repeated/maintenance rehearsal)
What is the visuo-spatial sketchpad?
The component of WMM that processes visual and spatial information in a mental space often called our ‘inner eye’
- imagining the front door
What are the two parts of the VSS and what do they do?
- Visual cache: stores visual information
- Inner scribe: stores the position/spatial relationship between visual objects
What is the episodic buffer?
The component of the WMM that brings together material from the other subsystems into a single memory rather than separate strands. It also provides a bridge between working memory and long-term memory
Why was the working memory model created?
- To address the problems in the MSM
- The MSM sees STM as a unitary store
- But research indicated that this was an inaccurate view of STM
What is a strength of the WMM? (clinical evidence)
- KF had poor STM ability for auditory (sound) information but could process visual information normally
- Immediate recall of letters and digits was better when he read them (visual) than when they were read to him (acoustic)
- His phonological loop was damaged but his visuo-spatial sketchpad was intact
- Strongly supports the existence of separate visual and acoustic memory stores
What is a counterpoint for clinical evidence?
- It is unclear whether KF had other cognitive impairments apart from damage to his PL which might’ve affected his performance on the memory tasks
- The trauma involved from the motorcycle may have affected his cognitive performance
- Challenges evidence that comes from clinical studies
What is a strength of the WMM? (dual-task performance)
- Studies of dual-task performance supports the separate existence of the visuo-spatial sketchpad
- When Baddeley’s participants carried out a visual and verbal task at the same time, their performance on each was similar to when they carried out the tasks separately
- When both tasks were visual/verbal, performance on both declines substantially
- Because both visual tasks compete for the same subsystem(VSS)
- There is no competition when performing a verbal and visual task together
- Shows that there must be a separate subsystem that processes visual input, VSS, and one for verbal processing, PL
What is a limitation of the WMM? (lack of clarity over the nature of the CE)
- Baddeley recognised that the CE is the most important but the least understood component of working memory
- CE needs to be more clearly specified
- Some psychologists believe that the CE may consist of separate sub components
- CE is an unsatisfactory component
- Challenges the integrity of the WMM
What is another evaluation of the WMM? (validity)
- Lacks validity
- Dual-task studies aren’t everyday memory tasks: lack application
- Carried out in highly-controlled lab conditions: lack generalisability