classic study: Baddeley LTM Flashcards
What was the aim of Baddeley’s study
- to investigate whether LTM encodes acoustically or semantically.
who were used in sample
- 72 males and females
- from ‘applied psychology research unit’ in cambridge
what type of method used?
lab
what did ‘condition A’ entail
pp’s learned a list of acoustically similar words
what did ‘condition B’ entail
pp’s learnt a list of acoustically dissimilar words
what did ‘condition C’ entail
pp’s learnt a list of 10 semantically similar words
what did ‘condition D’ entail
pp’s learned a list of 10 semantically dissimilar words
describe procedure of the classic study
-each list of 10 words were presented on a projector in a set order, one word every 3 seconds.
- after the 72 pp’s from ‘applied psychology research unit’ asked to complete 6 tasks involving memory digits to prevent rehearsal
- given 1 min to recall words in order
- this was repeated over 4 trials
- groups then given 20 min interference task involving copying 8 digit sequences
- pp’s then given a surprise test on word sequence of their condition
what was the IV
acoustically/semantically similar/dissimilar
what is the DV
number of words recalled in correct order
why did they repeat over 4 trials
to make sure the words learned were in the pp’s LTM by trials 3 and 4
what were results of Baddeley’s study
- around 40% of people recalled acoustically similar words correctly in 2 trials compared to 60% for acoustically dissimilar words.
- around 50% of semantically similar words were recalled in trial 4 compared to 85% of semantically dissimilar which was a significant difference
- none of the conditions showed any significance further forgetting between trial 4 and the retest
conclusion of experiment
- pp’s found it harder to recall acoustically similar words
-shows STM is largely acoustic as similar words were harder to encode into the LTM - pp’s found it harder to recall semantically similar words
- this shows that encoding in LTM is largely semantic
- therefore study demonstrates how STM and LTM are affected differently by different types of encoding
how could the study have high generalisability
memory is universal therefore results and conclusions should be true for all individuals
how could the study have low generalisability
study used a sample of 72 student volunteers from britain. Therefore ethnocentric are not representative of difference in word structure in other countries + not representative to people with brain damage which may have an effect on memory