Save
Psychology
Memory
Save
Share
Learn
Content
Leaderboard
Share
Learn
Created by
u
Visit profile
Cards (59)
What was the aim of
Baddeley's
(
1966
) study?
To test coding of
STM
and
LTM
View source
What procedure did
Baddeley
use in his study?
Gave different lists of words to four groups:
Words sounding similar (
acoustically
)
Words sounding different (acoustically)
Words with similar meaning (
semantically
)
Words with different meaning (semantically)
Participants
recalled visual words in the same order
View source
What were the
findings
regarding immediate recall in
Baddeley's
study?
Words with
similar
sounds were much harder to recall than words with dissimilar
properties
View source
What were the
findings
regarding recall after
20
minutes in
Baddeley's
study?
Words with similar meaning were much harder to recall
View source
What conclusion did
Baddeley
draw about
STM
and
LTM
coding?
STM codes
acoustically
, while LTM codes
semantically
View source
What does
Baddeley's
study suggest about the storage of
STM
and
LTM
?
They use varying stores as they code differently
View source
What is a strength of
Baddeley's
study regarding memory stores?
Showed a clear difference between
STM
and
LTM
Contributed to understanding of memory systems
Led to the development of the
multi-store model
View source
What is a limitation of
Baddeley's
study regarding
stimuli
used?
Used
artificial
stimuli rather than meaningful
Word lists
had no personal meaning
Findings may not apply to
real-world
memory tasks
View source
What was the aim of
Jacobs'
study?
To test the capacity of
STM
View source
What procedure did
Jacobs
use to measure
STM
capacity?
Participants repeated a sequence of digits back immediately
Repeated several times with increasing digit lengths
Stopped when
participants
made an error
View source
What was the
mean
digit span
found in
Jacobs'
study?
3 for letters and
9.3
for digits
View source
What did Jacobs conclude about the
capacity
of
STM
?
STM has a limited capacity between
5-9
items
View source
What is a strength of
Jacobs'
study regarding its replicability?
Jacobs' study has been
replicated
Provides support for the findings
Early research lacked adequate
controls
View source
What is a limitation of
Jacobs' study
regarding
confounding variables
?
Early research lacked adequate
controls
Confounding variables may have affected results
Participants might have been distracted during testing
View source
What was the aim of
Peterson & Peterson's
study?
To test the duration of
STM
View source
What procedure did
Peterson & Peterson
use to test
STM
duration?
Participants presented with a
3-letter
consonant syllable (trigram)
Asked to count backwards for intervals of 3,
6
,
9
, and
12
seconds
Prevented rehearsal during the task
View source
What were the findings regarding recall after 3 seconds in
Peterson
& Peterson's study?
Average recall was
80%
View source
What were the findings regarding recall after
18 seconds
in
Peterson
& Peterson's study?
Average recall was
3%
View source
What conclusion did
Peterson & Peterson
draw about the duration of
STM
?
STM has a duration of approximately
18-30
seconds when rehearsal is prevented
View source
What is a limitation of
Peterson & Peterson's
study regarding the material used?
Used meaningless material (
trigrams
)
Lacks
external validity
Does not reflect typical memory tasks
View source
What was the aim of
Bahrick et al.'s
study?
To test the duration of
LTM
View source
What method did
Bahrick et al.
use to test LTM duration?
Showed high school
yearbooks
Tested recall through:
Photo recognition test
of 50 yearbooks
Free recall
of names from graduating class
View source
What were the findings for photo recognition after 15 years in
Bahrick
et al.'s study?
90%
accurate
View source
What were the
findings
for free recall after
48
years in
Bahrick et al.'s
study?
30%
accurate
View source
What conclusion did
Bahrick et al.
draw about the duration of
LTM
?
LTM may last up to a
lifetime
for recall material
View source
What is a strength of
Bahrick et al.'s
study regarding
external validity
?
High
external validity
Investigated meaningful memories
Findings represent a more realistic estimate of
LTM duration
View source
What was the aim of
Miller's
1956
study?
To test the capacity of
short-term memory
(STM)
View source
What did
Miller
find regarding the capacity of
STM
?
The capacity of STM is
7 ± 2
items
View source
How many
words
can people recall as easily as
letters
according to
Miller's
findings
?
People can recall
5
words as easily as 5 letters
View source
What is referred to as
Miller's Magic Number
?
Miller's Magic Number is
7
± 2
View source
What is a limitation of
Miller's
research on
STM
capacity?
May have underestimated STM capacity
Research conducted by
Nelson Chean
reviewed other studies
Peak capacity of STM is about
4.5 chunks
Suggests lower end of Miller's estimate (5 items) is more appropriate
View source
What does the peak capacity of
STM
being about 4.5 chunks imply about
Miller's
findings?
It suggests that the lower end of Miller's estimate (5 items) is more appropriate than 7 items
View source
What is the
multi-store model
of memory proposed by
Atkinson and Shiffrin
?
A model that assumes different types of memory exist
View source
What does the
multi-store model
of memory suggest about the
system's operation
?
The system works effectively and follows a linear path
View source
What are the key features of the
multi-store model of memory
(
MSM
)?
A structural model
Distinction between
SR
,
STM
, and
LTM
Damage to one store does not affect others
Information passes linearly (SR → STM → LTM)
Each store has different characteristics (coding, capacity, duration)
Different explanations for forgetting in each store
View source
What is the capacity of the
sensory register
(
SR
)?
Very large
View source
What is the duration of the
sensory register
(SR)?
Milliseconds
View source
What type of coding is used in the
sensory register
(SR)?
Iconic/Echoic
View source
What is the duration of
short-term memory
(
STM
)?
Max
30
seconds
View source
What is the capacity of
short-term memory
(
STM
)?
7 +/- 2
items
View source
See all 59 cards
See similar decks
AQA GCSE Psychology
1687 cards
AP Psychology
2391 cards
OCR GCSE Psychology
2567 cards
2.1.3 Reconstructive Memory
Edexcel A-Level Psychology > Unit 2: Cognitive Psychology > 2.1 Memory Models
41 cards
5.3 Research Studies in Memory
OCR GCSE Psychology > Unit 5: Memory
96 cards
2.2.1 Short-Term Memory
Edexcel GCSE Psychology > Topic 2: Memory – How does your memory work? > 2.2 Features of Memory
63 cards
Unit 5: Memory
OCR GCSE Psychology
216 cards
2.3 The Working Memory Model
AQA A-Level Psychology > 2. Memory
36 cards
Topic 2: Memory – How does your memory work?
Edexcel GCSE Psychology
245 cards
2.2 Types of Long-Term Memory
AQA A-Level Psychology > 2. Memory
37 cards
2.1.2 Working Memory Model
Edexcel A-Level Psychology > Unit 2: Cognitive Psychology > 2.1 Memory Models
56 cards
2.2.2 Long-Term Memory
Edexcel GCSE Psychology > Topic 2: Memory – How does your memory work? > 2.2 Features of Memory
21 cards
5.1 Key Concepts in Memory
OCR GCSE Psychology > Unit 5: Memory
48 cards
5.4 Applications of Memory Research
OCR GCSE Psychology > Unit 5: Memory
28 cards
Topic 2: Memory – How does your memory work?
Edexcel GCSE Psychology
245 cards
Edexcel GCSE Psychology
3418 cards
1.1 Memory
AQA GCSE Psychology > Unit 1: Cognition and Behaviour
164 cards
7.3 Memory
AQA A-Level Computer Science > 7.0 Fundamentals of computer organization and architecture
19 cards
2.4 Theories of Memory
Edexcel GCSE Psychology > Topic 2: Memory – How does your memory work?
90 cards
2.2 Features of Memory
Edexcel GCSE Psychology > Topic 2: Memory – How does your memory work?
84 cards
b. Memory:
Edexcel GCSE Computer Science > Topic 3: Computers > 3.1 Hardware and Software Components > 3.1.1 Understanding computer hardware:
115 cards