psychology memory

    Cards (65)

    • what are the key points of sensory memory
      shortest term memory
      ability to retain impressions of sensory info after original stimuli has ended
      received through the 5 senses are retained accurately but very briefly
    • what are they key points of short term memory
      memory for immediate events
      sum are measured in seconds and minutes
      limited capacity
      coded acoustically
    • what are the key points of long term memory
      memory for events that have happened in the past or knowledge-gained facts
      long duration
      potentially unlimited capacity+duration
      coded semantically
    • what is coding
      the way information is changed so it can be stored in memory
      in enters the brain via the senses then is stored in various forms
    • what are the 3 ways memory are saved via coding
      visual codes
      acoustic codes
      semantic codes
    • what is the capacity for sensory memory
      unknown
    • what is the duration for sensory memory
      half a second
    • what is the coding for sensory memory
      5 senses
    • what is the capacity for STM
      7+or-2 items
      4 small chunks
    • what is the duration for STM
      up to 30 seconds
    • what is the coding for STM
      acoustically
    • what is the capacity for LTM
      potentially unlimited
    • what is the duration for LTM
      unlimited
    • what is the coding for LTM
      semantically
    • how does sensory memory disappear

      through decay
    • how does STM disappear

      decay and displacement
    • how does LTM disappear

      retrieval failure and interference
    • what does episodic memory consist of

      personal experiences
      may recall the time, place+who was there
      may recall context surrounding+associated emotions
      3 elements: specific details, content, emotion
    • what is the working memory model
      an explanation of STM,this is not a fault; it is a more complete explanation of STM than the MSM
    • what is the multi store model\what does it consist of.

      environmental stimuli
      sensory memory
      attention
      maintenance rehearsal
      short term memory
      retrieval
      elabrotive rehearsal
      retrieval
      long term memory
    • what does the working memory model consist of

      central executive
      episodic buffer
      articulatory/phonological loop
      visuospatial scratchpad
    • what does the central executive do

      drives the whole system+allocates tasks to the subsystems
      decides what info goes to LTM and what is discarded
    • what does the general buffer do

      communicates with both LTM and other components of working memory
    • what does the articulatory/phonological loop consist of

      remembers in speech form
      practise words in head
      make sure words make sense
      inner voice sub vocal rehearsal + inner ear acoustic reading
      deals with spoken and written material
    • what does the visuo spatial scratchpad consist of

      stores and processes information in a visual or spatial form
      the VSS is used for navigation
    • what two predictions does the WMM make

      1-if two tasks make use of the same component they can't be performed successfully together
      2-if two tasks make use of different components, it should be possible to perform them together and separately.
    • what is proactive interference
      involves old information interfering with new information
    • what is the test for proactive interference
      give p's nonsense syllables to learn for 6 mins, after this ask them to recall.
      performance wasn't as good if there was intervening tasks.
      shows RI,later task interfered with previously learnt
      George muller (1900)
    • what is retroactive interference
      involves new info interfering with new info
    • what is the test for retroactive interference
      p's memorised 10 or more lists, tested them after 24 hrs to recall.
      they remembered 20%
      Benton underwood (1957)
    • What does the retrieval failure theory explain about forgetting in long-term memory (LTM)?
      It explains forgetting as retrieval failure where information is stored but cannot be accessed.
    • According to the retrieval failure theory, what is the primary cause of forgetting?
      Forgetting is due to a lack of cues, not a lack of accessibility.
    • Who proposed the encoding specificity principle?
      Tulving
    • What does the encoding specificity principle state?
      Information is more easily retrieved if the cues present during encoding are also present during retrieval.
    • How does being happy during learning affect information retrieval during an exam?
      If you are happy while learning and during the exam, you will retrieve information better due to the physiological state acting as a cue.
    • What was the procedure used in the study involving 40 words and recall conditions?
      • Participants learned 40 words from 12 categories.
      • They were tested on recall or given cues in the form of category names.
    • What is context-dependent forgetting?
      It occurs when relevant environmental cues present during learning are missing at recall.
    • What is state-dependent forgetting?
      It occurs in the absence of relevant psychological or physiological cues present during learning.
    • Give an example of state-dependent forgetting.
      If someone is happy while learning and is not happy during recall, they may forget information.
    • What was the focus of Godden and Baddeley's (1975) study?

      The study focused on deep-sea divers learning and recalling words in different environments.
    See similar decks