Memory pshycology

    Cards (79)

    • Who proposed the multistore model of memory?
      Atkinson and Shiffrin
    • What are the three stores of memory in the multistore model?
      Sensory register, short-term memory (STM), and long-term memory (LTM)
    • How does information pass between the stores in the multistore model?
      In a linear way
    • What type of stores are STM and LTM described as in the multistore model?
      Unitary stores
    • What is sensory memory?
      The information you get from your senses, such as eyes and ears
    • What happens to information when attention is paid to it in the environment?
      It is converted to short-term memory
    • What occurs if maintenance rehearsal does not happen?
      Information is forgotten and lost from short-term memory
    • What are the characteristics of each memory store in the multistore model?
      • **Encoding**:
      • Sensory: sense-specific
      • STM: mainly acoustic
      • LTM: mainly semantic (can be visual and acoustic)
      • **Capacity**:
      • Sensory: all sensory experience
      • STM: 7 +/- 2 items
      • LTM: unlimited
      • **Duration**:
      • Sensory: ¼ to ½ second
      • STM: 0-18 seconds
      • LTM: unlimited
    • What is maintenance rehearsal?
      Repetition of material to maintain it in short-term memory
    • What is elaborative rehearsal?
      Linking information with existing material to aid longer-term storage
    • How did later models differ from the multistore model regarding short-term memory?
      They distinguished between different components of short-term memory
    • What does the Working Model of Memory propose about short-term memory?
      It is more complicated than just one simple unitary store
    • What is the role of rehearsal in transferring information to long-term memory?
      It helps transfer information but is not essential
    • What did Glanzer and Cunitz's study demonstrate about memory?
      Participants remember the first and last words better than the middle ones
    • What is the primacy effect?
      Better recall of words at the beginning of a list
    • What is the recency effect?
      Better recall of words at the end of a list
    • What did the case of KF demonstrate about memory?
      His long-term memory was unaffected, but he struggled with short-term memory
    • What are the three types of long-term memory proposed by Tulving?
      Episodic, semantic, and procedural memory
    • What is procedural memory responsible for?
      Knowing how to do things, such as motor skills
    • What is semantic memory responsible for?
      Storing information about the meaning of words and general knowledge
    • What is episodic memory responsible for?
      Storing information about events we have experienced
    • What is the difference between declarative and procedural knowledge?
      Declarative knowledge involves "knowing that," while procedural knowledge involves "knowing how"
    • What happens to episodic and semantic memory in amnesic patients?
      They have difficulty retaining new episodic and semantic information
    • What is the working memory model's view on short-term memory?
      It involves active processing and short-term storage of information
    • What are the key features of the working memory model?
      Central executive, phonological loop, and visuospatial sketchpad
    • What is the function of the central executive in the working memory model?
      It acts as a filter and determines which information is attended to
    • What does the phonological loop do?
      It temporarily holds auditory information in a speech-based form
    • What are the two parts of the phonological loop?
      The phonological store and the articulatory process
    • What is the function of the visuospatial sketchpad?
      It temporarily holds visual and spatial information
    • What are the two parts of the visuospatial sketchpad?
      The visual cache and the inner scribe
    • What is the episodic buffer's role in the working memory model?
      It acts as a temporary store that communicates with long-term memory
    • What do dual task studies support about working memory?
      It is easier to perform two tasks using different processing systems
    • What did the KF case study demonstrate about working memory?
      There are separate components for visual and verbal information
    • What is a limitation of the working memory model?
      Little is known about how the central executive works
    • What is retrieval failure?
      Information is available in long-term memory but cannot be recalled
    • What are retrieval cues?
      Information stored about the situation when a new memory is formed
    • What is state-dependent retrieval?
      Memory is best when a person's state is similar at encoding and retrieval
    • What are examples of state retrieval cues?
      Physical, emotional, and mood states
    • What does AO1 refer to in the context of evaluating studies?
      Knowledge and understanding of the procedures and findings of a study
    • What does AO3 indicate when evaluating studies?
      It involves commenting on what the studies show and their implications for theory
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