Memory Flashcards
Multi-Store Model of Memory
The MSM was put through by Shiffin and Atkinson and consists of 3 memory stores: the sensory memory store, the short-term memory store and the long term memory store. Each store has different characteristics. The SM has unlimited capacity and a duration of 0.5 to 2 seconds. The STM is encoded acoustically, has a capacity of 7+/-2 pieces of information and a duration of 18 to 30 seconds. The LTM is encoded semantically has unlimited capacity and an infinite duration which can last a lifetime.
In order for information to move from SM to STM, you must pay attention to it. Maintenance rehearsal must occur in order to keep it in your STM, but elaborative rehearsal is needed to move it to your LTM. Any information which is not rehearsed is either displaced or decayed (forgotten).
Coding
- Definition
- coding in STM + LTM
- Baddley research - similar words / mistakes
= Coding refers to the format or ‘type’ of information which is stored in each memory store.
Coding is acoustic in short-term memory, and semantic in long-term memory, as demonstrated by Baddeley
(1966), who found that more mistakes are made when recalling acoustically-similar words straight
after learning them, whilst more mistakes are made when recalling semantically-similar words 20
minutes after learning them (LTM recall).
Capacity
= Capacity refers to the volume of information/data which can be kept in any memory store at any one
time.
For example, the capacity of STM is thought to be 7 +/- 2 items (Miller), whilst the capacity of
LTM is unlimited. This is based on Miller’s idea that things come in groups of 7 (e.g. 7 days of the
week), suggesting that we are predisposed to remembering this quantity and that such a ‘chunking’
the method can help us recall information. Jacobs also demonstrated that the mean letter span was 7.3
and the mean digit span was 9.3 (i.e. the number of letters or digits we can recall after increasing
intervals).
Duration
= Duration refers to the amount of time that information can be stored in each memory store.
The duration of STM is 18-30 seconds, as demonstrated by Petersen et al (1959), who found that
increasing retention intervals decreased the accuracy of recall of consonant syllables in 24
undergraduates, when counting down from a 3 digit number (preventing mental rehearsal). The
duration of LTM is unlimited, as shown by Bahrick et al (1975), who found that photo recognition of
graduating classmates of the 396 participants decreased from 90% to 70% between 15 years and
46 years of graduating
Short-term memory
The duration of STM seems to be between 15 and 30 seconds and the capacity is about 7 items.
1. limited capacity (only about 7 items can be stored at a time)
2. limited duration (storage is very fragile and information can be lost with distraction or passage of time)
3. encoding (primarily acoustic, even translating visual information into sounds).
3 main types of encoding
- Acoustic coding - sound
Visual coding - a visual representation
semantic coding - the meaning of a stimulus
HM case
It supports the MSM as he could not encode into his LTM because his hippocampus was removed, but his STM was unaffected. This proves that STM and LTM are 2 separate stores located in different areas of the brain. This proves that maintenance rehearsal is important in the transfer of information from STM to LTM memory to enable retrieval. This case furthers our understanding into how the memory works according to the MSM
Long term Memory
- LTM is the part of our memory system that stores information for extended periods of time.
- It is typically divided into two main categories: explicit memory and implicit memory.
Explicit memory/declarative memory
- is the conscious recollection of facts and events. It is the type of memory that we can consciously recall and describe, such as remembering the capital of France or the name of a friend.
- Explicit memory is further divided into two subcategories: semantic memory, which is our general knowledge about the world, and episodic memory, which is our memory of specific events and experiences.
Implicit memory/Procedural memory/non-declarative memory
is the unconscious recollection of skills and habits. It is the type of memory that allows us to perform tasks automatically, such as riding a bike or tying our shoes. Implicit memory is not consciously controlled, and we are typically not aware of the information stored in this type of memory.
Episodic memory
Autobiographical memory
- recalling events that happened in a specfic point in time
- Episodic memory refers to any events that can be reported from a person’s life.
- memories are time stamped
Episodic memories also store information about how events relate to each other in time. A single episode will include people, places, objects and behaviours. - you have to make a conscious effect to recall episodic memories.
Semantic memory
- memory of facts and knowledge about the world and requires conscious effect may also include meaning of words
- these memories are not stamped.
Procedural memory
* motor/action/muscle -based memory of how to do something
- motor/action/muscle -based memory of how to do something /perform an activity
Procedural memory describes our implicit knowledge of tasks that usually do not require conscious recall to perform them. One example would be riding a bike –you might struggle to consciously recall how to manage the task, but we can [unconsciously] perform it with relative ease.
is a cognitive model that describes the STM
Working Memory Model
4 components
- Central exceutive is a control center, controls information from 3 slave systems
- it directs attention to particular tasks
- does not store any information and has limited capaciity
- Phonological loop- temporary storage of auditory information
- phonological store (‘inner ear’),- which holds the words we hear
- articutory control process (‘inner voice’) - holds the worlds we are about to say
- visuospatial Sketchpad – this temporarily retains visual and spatial information
- It helps tasks like remembering shapes, coloursor the location of objects
- Episodic Buffer - Baddeley added this in 2000
- It acts as a back up store which communicates with LTM and the componets of WMM
Maintenance rehearsal
The process of repeating information to hold it in our STM
Dual task performance
we do tasks at the same time as long they use different processing systems
Strengths of WMM
- A strength of the working memory model is that clinical research evidence that there is a separate visual and acoustic store-KF case study
- Another strength is that studies of dual-task performance support the separate existence of the visuo-spatial sketchpad- Baddeley
- However, one limitation of the WMM is that most of the research for the model comes from laboratory experiments.
- here is solid evidence for the phonological loop and visuospatial sketchpad, Baddeley and Hitch’s idea of the central executive has been criticised for lacking falsifiability.
Weaknesses of WMM
Despite providing more detail of STM than the multi-store model, the WMM has been criticized for being too simplistic and vague, e.g. it is unclear what the central executive is, or its exact role in attention.
- Results from laboratory experiments researching the WMM will often have low ecological validity (i.e. may not relate to real life), as tasks such as repeating ‘the the the’ are arguably not representative of our everyday activities.
The central executive
The central executive has been described as an ‘attentional process’ with a very limited processing
capacity, and whose role is to allocate tasks to the 3 slave systems
The phonological loop
The phonological loop processes auditory information and allows for maintenance rehearsal by being made up of the articulatory process
whilst the articulatory process acts as an “inner voice” and repeats the series of words (or other speech elements) on a loop to prevent them from decaying.