Grant Flashcards
1
Q
key theme + area
A
key theme = memory
area = cognitive
2
Q
background
A
- Godden and Baddeley showed context affects memory retrieval in recall but not in recognition tests
3
Q
aim
A
To test the effect of noise as a source of context
dependant memory on the studying and retrieval of meaningful material in an academic context.
4
Q
method
A
- lab experiment
- independent measures design used (each ppt experienced 1 out of the 4 conditions)
IV = Background noise noisy/silent conditions - matching or mismatching the conditions
DV = -measured in 2 way;
> Recall (short answer test of 10 questions)
> Retrieval (multiple choice test of 16 questions)
5
Q
conditions
A
- Silent/silent
- Noisy/noisy
- Silent/noisy
- Noisy/silent
6
Q
material used
A
- Cassette tape and headphones-
- Cafeteria noise recording
- Psychoimmunology text
- Recognition test
- Recall test
7
Q
sample
A
- 39 ppts (17-56 yrs; 17 females and 23 males)
- Opportunity sample
(Results from 1 ppt were excluded as their results was too low.)
8
Q
procedure
A
- Instructions given
- Headphones on and asked to read the article could underline highlight important parts.
- Timing of reading was recorded
- Given 2 minutes rest where they could take off their headphones
- Place headphones back on to complete the Recall (short answers) and recognition (MCQ’s) test
- Debrief
9
Q
results
A
- Both performance on short-answer and multiple-choice tests sig. better in matching conditions than in non-matching ones.
- Recall is better when studying and testing in the same
environments in terms of the noisiness of
surroundings. - No sig. diff between noisy/silent study groups or
retrieval conditions.
10
Q
conclusions
A
- Noise does not affect students capacity to
study- we still see retrieval in the noisy conditions - Context-dependence affects retrieval-