PAPER 1- TOPIC 2 MEMORY ✅ Flashcards

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1
Q

Define coding

A

how information is formatted and stored in the various memory stores

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2
Q

Describe the research on coding

Findings

A

Baddeley

  • showed a list of words to 4 groups
  • one group shown semantically similar words, one group semantically dissimilar, one acoustically similar and one acoustically dissimilar
  • when asked to recall words, in order, immediately they recalled less acoustically similar words
  • when asked to recall words after 20 mins they recalled less semantically similar words
  • shows that info is coded acoustically in STM and semantically in LTM (as the way they are coded is similar, the words are jumbled and less is remembered)
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3
Q

define capacity

A

the amount of information that can be held in a memory store

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4
Q

Describe research on capacity

A

Jacob’s digit span test

  • research reads out an increasing number of digits and the P repeats them back, until the P fails to recall them correctly
  • mean digit span was 9.3
  • mean letter span was 7.3

•Millers magic number 7
-STM can hold 7 +- 2 memories

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5
Q

define duration

A

the length of time that information can be held in a memory store

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6
Q

Describe research in duration of STM

A

Peterson and Peterson

  • 24 students tested over a number of trials
  • student given a consonant syllable (e.g. YCB) to recall after 3,6,9,12,15 seconds
  • told to count backwards from a random number to prevent mental rehearsal
  • found recall after 3 second was 80% but after 18 seconds it was 3 % (STM duration is 18 secs unless rehearsal is used)
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7
Q

Describe research into duration of LTM

A

Bahrick et al

  • studied about 400 Americans between 17 and 74
  • asked to recall their high school classmates through: photo recognition and free recall (name as many in your class as you can)
  • P’s within 15 years of graduation 90% were accurate in photo recognition
  • P’s within 50 years of graduation 70% were accurate in photo recognition
  • free recall declined from 60% to 30% for P’s 15 years and 50 years since graduation
  • shows that LTM may last up to a lifetime
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8
Q

who coined the multi store model

A

Atkinson and Shiffrin

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9
Q

what does the multi store model show

A
  • model that shows how information flows across 3 distinct memory storage systems, through processing
  • and hows how memory works in these 3 stores
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10
Q

Describe the sensory register in the multi store model

A
  • all stimuli from environment passes into it
  • unwanted info doesn’t pass further into the memory system (selective attention)
  • has 5 sensory register (memory store) one for each sense
  • info is coded modality-specific (depends on sense)
    e. g. visual info is coded into the iconic memory
    e. g. sound info is coded into the echoic memory
  • duration for sensory register is half a second
  • very high capacity (only processed further if attention payed to it)
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11
Q

Describe the short term memory in the multi store model

A

a temporary store

  • coding: acoustically
  • duration: 18 seconds, unless rehearsed
  • capacity: limited (7+-2)
  • —-rehearsal keeps info in STM, if rehearse material over and over again (maintenance rehearsal), for long enough (prolonged rehearsal), info then goes into LTM
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12
Q

Describe the long term memory in the multi store model

A

permanent store

  • coded semantically
  • duration is up to lifetime
  • unlimited capacity
  • to recall info, it transfer from the LTM into the STM (called retrieval)
  • prolonged rehearsal passes info into LTM from STM
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13
Q

define maintenance rehearsal (rehearsal loop)

A
  • when we rehearse material over and over again, to retain it in the STM
  • if rehearsed long enough, transfers to the LTM, due to prolonged rehearsal
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14
Q

who coined the working memory model

what are the 5 components

A

(Baddeley)- a development of the MSM, acknowledging the MSM’s weakness of over-simplifying the STM

central executive
visuo-spatial sketchpad
episodic buffer
phonological loop
LTM
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15
Q

what is the working memory model and what does it show

A

WMM is a ‘mental workspace’ that is active during temporary storing and manipulation of information, and shows how the STM is organised and how it functions during this

  • retains information for a brief period while mental operations are performed on that information (with limited capacity)
  • claims this is required for complex reasoning and learning
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16
Q

Function of the central executive

capacity?

A
  • monitors incoming data
  • focuses and divides our limited attention
  • co ordinates the activities of the slave systems, and allocates them to the memory data
  • very low processing capacity, doesn’t store any information
17
Q

function of the phonological loop

coding??

  • what stores are contained in this loop
A

• temporarily stores auditory information and preserves the order information arrives (coding is acoustic)

split into
- phonological store: stores words you hear

  • articulatory control system: allows maintenance rehearsal (hold up to two seconds worth of what you say, to keep it in working memory when needed)
18
Q

function of visuo-spatial sketchpad

capacity??

what is it split up into

A
  • stores visual and spatial information
  • limited capacity of 3 or 4 objects (Baddeley)

(Logie) split it into:

  • visual cache (stores visual data)
  • inner scribe (records arrangements of the object in visual field)
19
Q

function of the episodic buffer

capacity??

A

added later on by Baddeley

  • temporary store for information that integrates all the visual, spatial and verbal information processed by other stores
  • maintains time sequencing (order it happens)
  • it links the working memory to LTM and cognitive processes like perception
  • limited capacity of about 4 chunks (Baddeley)
20
Q

Define a cognitive interview

who coined the techniques of the cognitive interview

A

method of interviewing eyewitnesses to help them retrieve more accurate memories

-uses four main techniques : created based on psychology knowledge of how human’s memory works

(Fisher and Gesielman)

21
Q

Four techniques used in cognitive interviews

A

•Report Everything - recall all details, no matter how confident P is in it, or how trivial as could result in cues for other memories

•Reinstate the context
- return to the crime scene mentally and imagine the environment (what can you see, hear)
(context dependent forgetting)
- recall emotions (context dependent forgetting)
…… these may trigger cues for other memories

  • Reverse the order- (middle to beginning or end to beginning) much harder to lie, prevents expectations of what must have happened
  • Change perspective- perspective of different person,
  • prevents recall of expectations
  • prevents use of schema and what must have happened (e.g. schema of particular setting may generate expectations)
22
Q

What changes were made in the Enhanced Cognitive Interview

A

-Fisher added elements focusing on the social interaction to make the witness more comfortable and less anxious

e. g.
- interviewer needs to know when to make and break eye contact
- making witness speak slowly
- minimising distractions
- asking more open questions