Psychology- memory

    Cards (61)

    • What are the three main processes of memory?
      Encoding, storage, and retrieval
    • What is encoding in the context of memory?
      Changing information into a form so it can be held in the brain
    • What is visual encoding?
      Changing information by how it looks so it can be stored
    • What is acoustic encoding?
      Changing information by how it sounds so it can be stored
    • What is semantic encoding?
      Changing information by its meaning so it can be stored
    • What is tactile encoding?
      Memory of what things feel like to touch
    • What is olfactory encoding?
      Memory for smell
    • What is storage in memory processes?
      Holding information in memory so that it can be retrieved later
    • What is retrieval in memory processes?
      Locating and bringing back information into mind
    • What are the types of retrieval?
      1. Recognition – identifying from options
      2. Cued recall – locating information with a cue
      3. Free recall – without cues
    • What was the aim of Baddeley's study?
      To see if there was a difference in the type of encoding used in STM and LTM
    • What method did Baddeley use in his study?
      Participants learned words that were similar or dissimilar in sound and meaning
    • What were the results of Baddeley's study regarding similar sounding words?
      They were poorly recalled in STM
    • What were the results of Baddeley's study regarding similar meaning words?
      They were poorly recalled in LTM
    • What conclusion can be drawn from Baddeley's study?
      STM is encoded by sound and LTM by meaning
    • What are the strengths of Baddeley's study?
      • Controlled experiment
      • Extraneous variables like hearing were controlled
    • What are the weaknesses of Baddeley's study?
      • LTM may not have been adequately tested
      • STM is sometimes visual
    • What is episodic memory?
      Memory for events from your life
    • What is semantic memory?
      Memory of what things mean
    • What is procedural memory?
      Memory of how to do things
    • What are the two types of long-term memory?
      • Declarative: episodic and semantic
      • Non-declarative: procedural
    • What evidence supports the different types of LTM?
      • Brain scans show different types relate to different brain locations
      • Amnesic patients like Clive Wearing support LTM types
    • What are the limitations of the distinct types of LTM?
      • Distinctive types are difficult to separate
      • It may be an oversimplification
    • What does the multi-store model of memory explain?
      How memory is arranged
    • What are the three memory stores in the multi-store model?
      1. Sensory memory
      2. Short-term memory (STM)
      3. Long-term memory (LTM)
    • What is the duration and capacity of sensory memory?
      Very short duration and large capacity
    • What is the duration and capacity of short-term memory (STM)?
      Limited duration (30 seconds) and capacity (5-9 items)
    • What type of coding is used in STM?
      Acoustic coding
    • What role does rehearsal play in memory?
      Rehearsal keeps information in STM and transfers it to LTM
    • What is the duration and capacity of long-term memory (LTM)?
      Unlimited capacity and stored up to a lifetime
    • What supporting research exists for the multi-store model?
      • Baddeley's encoding research shows qualitative differences between STM and LTM
      • Primacy and recency effects support the model
    • What are the limitations of the multi-store model?
      • Too simplistic with one STM and LTM store
      • Uses artificial materials like word lists
    • What is the primacy effect?
      Words at the beginning are remembered more
    • What is the recency effect?
      Words at the end are remembered more
    • What was the aim of Murdock's study?
      To see if memory of words is affected by location in a list
    • What method did Murdock use in his study?
      Participants listened to word lists and recalled words after each list
    • What were the results of Murdock's study?
      Higher recall for the first words (primacy effect) and last words (recency effect)
    • What conclusion can be drawn from Murdock's study?
      It shows the serial position effect and supports the MSM stores
    • What are the strengths of Murdock's study?
      • High level of control in a lab setting
      • Concluded that position of words determined recall
    • What are the weaknesses of Murdock's study?
      • Used artificial tasks with word lists
      • Lacks validity for real-life memory
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