duration

Cards (21)

  • How many American participants were involved in bahrick 1975
    392 American participants
  • What is a strength of Bahrick's study regarding external validity?
    • High external validity (ecological validity- can be applied to other settings, so is relevant to real life)
    • Closer to real life than Peterson + Peterson 1959
  • How long can information be held in Short-Term Memory?

    Up to about 30 seconds
  • What happens to information in Short-Term Memory if it is rehearsed?

    It can transfer to Long-Term Memory
  • How long can information remain in Long-Term Memory?

    Indefinitely
  • Does rehearsal guarantee successful transfer to Long-Term Memory?

    No, rehearsal does not always ensure success
  • peterson + peterson 1959
    • aim- to see if rehearsal was necessary to hold information in the short term memory store
  • peterson + peterson 1959- procedure
    • given trigrams
    • immediately asked to count backwards in sets of 3 for intervals of 3,6,9,12,15,18
  • why where participants asked to count backwards for peterson + peterson 1959 

    to prevent rehearsal
  • findings of peterson + peterson 1959
    • 3seconds - 90% trigram recall
    • 18seconds - 3% trigram recall
    • >18 seconds - virtually all information forgotten
    • concluded that information can't be held in the short term memory store without rehearsal
    • STM duration is 18-30seconds
  • what is displacement
    when new information displaces or removes old information from the short term memory store
  • peterson + peterson 1959 (criticisms)
    disadvantages:
    • lacks ecological validity (not reflected in other settings, meaning not reflected in real life) - this is as it is not a normal everyday task to memorise trigrams
    • lacks mundane realism (not realistic to real life, so harder to generalise) - because it was conducted in a controlled experimental setting (artificial)
    • may produce demand characteristics (conducting the experiment in a highly controlled environment allows participants to guess the aim)
    advantages:
    • highly controlled setting means it can be easily replicated
  • what are trigrams
    three letter constants with no meaning (eg HLG)
  • why are trigrams used
    • so no meaning can be attached, and therefore can't be semantically encoded to the short term memory store
  • why can't peterson and peterson 1959 results be generalised 

    the participants were university students, so not representative of whole population- meaning can't be generalised
  • peterson and peterson, may show effect of displacement due to counting backwards. this means the conclusions have low internal validity
  • Bahrick 1975
    • 392 american participants aged 17-74
    • took their highschool year books and asked the participants to recall people from their graduating class
    two types of tests were used:
    • photo recognition (50 photos, some from year book, then had to name people)
    • free recall (had to recall names without any visual prompts)
  • results of bahricks study
    • within 15yrs graduation - 90% photo recognition, 60% free recall
    • after 48 years of graduation - 70% photo recognition, 30 free recall
    meaning that long term memory may last up to a lifetime for some material, and free recall was less accurate than photo recognition
  • lab- high control, low external validity
    field- low control, high external validity
  • disadvantages of bahricks study (1975)

    lack of control of extraneous variables- the participants may be friends still with people from high school, may have looked over book in the past week etc.
  • lab studies- have poorer retention as they lack emotional attachment (eg peterson + peterson 1959)