U2: Learning and Memory Flashcards
Includes types of memory and their functioning.
What is Learning?
Acquiring new knowledge, behaviours, skills, values etc. Also involves synthesizing and processing different types of information.
Benjamin Bloom’s 3 domains of learning
- Cognitive
- Psychomotor
- Affective
These are not mutually exclusive domains.
What is memory?
Memory refers to the psychological processes of acquiring, storing, retaining, and later retrieving information.
Three processes of memory storage
Memory involves three major processes: encoding, storage, and retrieval.
Atkinson and Richard Shiffrin Model
They proposed the 3 box model of memory storage. Known as multi-store memory model
1. Sensory Memory
2. Short Term Memory
3. Long Term Memory
Sensory Memory (SM)
- Transduction of energy/stimulus.
- Conversion of one form of energy into another. Brain can recognize only electrical signals.
- Body have sensory receptors for transduction.
- In the process of transduction, memory is created.
- Retains information only for a short period, just enough to recognize and encode if the information is relevant.
- Visual - Iconic memory (less than 1/2 s)
Auditory - Echoic Memory (less than 3 s)
George Sperling Experiment
- To prove that STM exists.
- Device: Tachistoscope
- Subjects were presented with random letters arranged in rows and flashed for seconds. They were then asked to recollect specific rows.
- Immediate recall was more accurate than delayed recall.
Selective Attention
- A feature of Sensory Memory.
- Proven by George Sperling experiment.
- By nature our attention is selective. Only some information goes to STM.
Main points for SM
- Definition
- Relevance
- Types and their retention time.
- George Sperling experiment
- Selective attention
Short Term Memory (STM)
- Short-term memory, also known as active memory, is the information we are currently aware of or thinking about. In Freudian psychology, this memory would be referred to as the conscious mind. Paying attention to sensory memories generates information in short-term memory.
- Limited Capacity - reason why selective attention is important.
George Miller Research
- Proposed that we can remember 7 +/- 2 ‘items’ in STM. After this limit recall is difficult and is prone to mistakes.
- Items can be in groups also. Helps in recalling multiple information together.
Eg: Organizational Encoding: Chunking
Short Term Storage and Working Memory (WM)
- Middle ground between SM and LTM. Often used interchangeably with STM.
- Working Memory refers to the processes that are used to temporarily store, organize, and manipulate information.
- Working memory is a limited capacity store for retaining information for a brief period while performing mental operations on that information.
Allan Baddeley and Graham Hitch Model of WM
- The Working Memory Model, proposed by Baddeley and Hitch in 1974, describes short-term memory as a system with multiple components.
- Comprises Central Executive: decides what to do with the information. Drives the whole system (e.g., the boss of working memory) and allocates data to the subsystems
Subsystems of Central Executive
- Visuospatial Sketchpad: stores and processes information in a visual or spatial form. The visuospatial sketchpad is used for navigation.
- Phonological Loop: deals with spoken and written material. Mentally loop the sound, kind of like rehearsal. It is a loop, so distraction might break the loop and result in loss of information.
Phonological Loop is subdivided into:
1. Phonological Store (inner ear) processes speech perception and stores spoken words we hear for 1-2 seconds.
2. Articulatory control process (inner voice) processes speech production, and rehearses and stores verbal information from the phonological store.
Limitations of Storage model in explaining STM
Short-term memory can only hold information, working memory can both retain and process/manipulate information.