Memory WMM Flashcards
Central executive
Central executive
Attentional process that monitors days - limited capacity
Makes decisions and allocates slave systems to task
Visuospatial sketchpad
Visuospatial sketchpad
Stores visual/spatial information
Limited capacity about 3/4 objects according to Baddeley
Episodic buffer
Episodic buffer
Temporary store for information integrating the visual, spatial and verbal information processed by other stores and maining a sense of time-sequencing (recording events)
Storage component of central executive
Limites capacity of about four chunks
Episodic buffer links working memory to LTM
Phonological loop
Phonological loop
Deals with auditory information (acoustic coding) and preserves the order in which information arrives
Phonological loop store: Stores the words you hear
Articulatory control system: Allows maintenance rehearsal in a ‘loop’ to keep them in working memory
Capacity = ‘two seconds’
Supporting evidence: Clinical evidence
Clinical evidence: Shallice and Warrington’s cade of patient KF who suffered brain damage that affected his ability to process verbal information but not visual information which suggests that just his phonological loop had been damaged which supports the existence of separate visual and acoustic stores
Supporting evidence: Dual task performance:
Dual task performance: Baddely et al study of dual-task performance supports the separate existence of the visuo-spatial sketchpad. Participants had more difficulty doing two visual tasks (tracking a light and describing the letter F) then doing both a visual and verbal task. The increased difficulty is because both visual tasks compete for the same ‘slave system’ whilst a verbal and visual task uses different stores so no competition
Refuting evidence
Lack of clarity over the central executive: this component is unsatisfactory and doesn’t explain anything and needs to be more clearly specified than just being simply ‘attention’ - Baddeley “the central executive is the most important but least understood component of working memory”