Types of long term memory Flashcards
who proposed that there are three LTM stores
Tulving
what are the three LTM stores
episodic, semantic, procedural
episodic memory
Refers to our ability to recall events from our lives
These memories are time stamped so you remember when they happened as well as what happened
Your memory of a single episode includes people, places, objects and behaviour all interwoven to produce a single memory
Have to make a conscious effort to recall episodic memories
semantic memory
Contains our shared knowledge of the world
These memories aren’t time stamped
Semantic knowledge is less personal and more about the facts we all share
According to Tulving, it’s less vulnerable to distortion and forgetting than episodic memory
Must make conscious effort to recall semantic memories
procedural memory
Our memory for actions and skills
We can recall these memories without conscious awareness or much effort
Difficult to explain verbally
More resistant to forgetting
evaluation of types of LTM (brief)
strength - supporting evidence from HM, however lacks control variable
strength - real world application
weakness - conflicting evidence of brain location of LTM
strengths of types of LTM
evidence from case study of HM. HM’s episodic memory was impaired but his semantic memory was relatively unaffected. His procedural memories were also intact. This evidence supports Tulving’s view that there are different memory stores in LTM – one store can be damaged but other stores are unaffected. HOWEVER, clinical studies lack control variables. For example, the researcher had no knowledge of the individual’s memory before the damage. Therefore it’s difficult to judge how much worse it is afterwards. The lack of control limits how much clinical studies tell us about different types of LTM
there is real world application as understanding LTM allows psychologists to help people with memory loss. Belleville et al devised an intervention to improve episodic memory in older people. The trained participants performed better on a test of episodic memory after training than a control group. This shows that distinguishing between types of LTM enables specific treatments to be developed and this also increases the validity of Tulving’s research.
weakness of types of LTM
conflicting evidence of brain location of LTM. Buckner and Peterson reviewed research findings and concluded semantic memories are located in left prefrontal cortex and episodic in right prefrontal cortex. However, Tulving et al found semantic memories are associated with the right prefrontal cortex and episodic with left prefrontal cortex. This challenges any neuropsychological evidence to support types of memory as there is poor agreement on where each type may be located.