PAPER 1- TOPIC 2 MEMORY ✅ Flashcards
Define coding
how information is formatted and stored in the various memory stores
Describe the research on coding
Findings
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)
define capacity
the amount of information that can be held in a memory store
Describe research on capacity
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
define duration
the length of time that information can be held in a memory store
Describe research in duration of STM
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)
Describe research into duration of LTM
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
who coined the multi store model
Atkinson and Shiffrin
what does the multi store model show
- model that shows how information flows across 3 distinct memory storage systems, through processing
- and hows how memory works in these 3 stores
Describe the sensory register in the multi store model
- 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)
Describe the short term memory in the multi store model
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
Describe the long term memory in the multi store model
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
define maintenance rehearsal (rehearsal loop)
- 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
who coined the working memory model
what are the 5 components
(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
what is the working memory model and what does it show
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