After an intervention to improve episodicmemories in older people, the trained participants performed better on a test of episodic memory after training than a control group
His musical education., his children's names, parts of his previous life and when his wife Deborah would leave the room and come back he would greet her as if they hadn't seen each other in years
A professional musician who had a severe form of amnesia from a viral infection that attacked his brain and damaged his hippocampus and associated areas
Why do the case studies of HM and CW back up Tulving's theory of long term memory?
They both had severely impaired episodic memory, but semantic memory was unaffected, as they still understood the meaning of words. HM couldn't recall stroking a dog half an hour earlier but still knew what dog meant. Their procedural memory was still intact as CW, a professional musician, could still read music and play piano. This means one store can be damaged and another intact
They often start as episodic memories, meaning they are timed stamped, however they don't stay associated with that particular event so become non-time stamped.
How did Shallice and Warrington criticise the multi-store model?
The studied a client they referred to as KF who had amnesia. KF's STM was poor when they were read aloud to him but much better when he read it himself. Further studies showed there could be another short-term store for non-verbal sounds, which is not present in the multi-store model.