Long-Term Memory

Cards (6)

  • Tulving, 1985
    He proposed 3 stores of the LTM:
    • episodic
    • procedural
    • semantic
  • Episodic Memory - Explicit (Conscious)
    • an autobiographical record of personal experiences and events
    • usually easiest to remember as they are linked to senses meaning they're triggered by cues - different parts of memory are located in different parts of brain (e.g. images in visual area) but are connected together using hippocampus
    • this creates memory of an 'episode' and we have to consciously try and recall the memory
    • they are time-stamped which means we remember exactly when they occur
    Examples:
    • first day of school, your birthday party, a vacation
  • Semantic Memory - Explicit (Conscious)
    • contains all knowledge (facts, concepts, meanings) a person has learned
    • the memories are not time-stamped
    • linked to episodic memories as we learn new knowledge through our experiences
    • need to be consciously recalled to enable us to produce and understand language
    Examples:
    • capital cities of countries, knowing 2+2=4, recognising a dog is a type of animal
  • Procedural Memory - Implicit (Unconscious)
    • our ability to automatically perform learned tasks with little conscious thought
    • easy to perform but difficult to explain
    • important for daily functioning and helps perform cognitive and motor skills without awareness
    Examples:
    • riding a bike, tying your shoelaces, playing an instrument
  • Strengths of Tulving's LTM theory
    Neuroimaging evidence:
    • brain scan studies
    • Tulving et al (1994) asked PPs to do different memory tasks whilst using a PET scanner
    • they found that episodic and semantic memories were in the prefrontal cortex (left - semantic and right - episodic)
    • shows credibility
    Real-life application:
    • psychologists can target certain memories to improve a PPs life
    • Belleville et al (2006) proved episodic memories can be improved through training elderly people with cognitive impairments to focus on their episodic memories
    • enables specific treatments to be used
  • Weaknesses of Tulving's LTM theory
    Objections:
    • there is an overlap between episodic and semantic memories
    • in 2002, Tulving added to his theory by stating that an episodic memory is a specialised subcategory of semantic memories
    • this casts doubt on the claim that there are three types of LTM
    Research lacks control:
    • research into different types of LTM tends to use case studies (HM and Clive Wearing)
    • these studies lack generalisability and they were not tested prior to their illnesses/incident - therefore we cannot say for sure how their memories were affected