Save
Memory - AQA Psychology - Alevel
Save
Share
Learn
Content
Leaderboard
Share
Learn
Created by
Paul Evangelou
Visit profile
Cards (78)
Coding in memory:
Acoustic
coding in
short-term
memory
Semantic
coding in
long-term
memory
View source
Duration of memory stores:
Short-term memory duration is
18-30
seconds
Long-term memory duration is
unlimited
View source
Capacity
of memory stores:
Short-term
memory capacity is
7
+/-
2
items
Long-term
memory capacity is
unlimited
View source
Multi-Store Model of Memory:
3 stores:
sensory register
,
short-term
memory,
long-term
memory
Sensory
register has a huge
capacity
but duration of less than
half
a second
Short-term memory is
acoustically
encoded, has a
capacity
of
7
+/-
2
items, and a duration of
18-30
seconds
Long-term memory is
semantically
encoded, has
unlimited
capacity, and very
long
duration
View source
Types of Long-Term Memory:
Episodic
,
semantic
,
procedural
memories
Episodic
and
semantic
memories are recalled
consciously
,
procedural
memories are recalled
unconsciously
View source
Working Memory Model:
STM
consists of
central executive
,
phonological loop
,
visuo-spatial sketchpad
, and
episodic buffer
Central executive
allocates tasks to
slave systems
Phonological loop
processes
auditory
information
Visuo-spatial sketchpad
combines
visual
and
spatial
information
Episodic buffer
integrates all data processed by other
stores
View source
Explanations for Forgetting -
Interference
:
Interference
can be
retroactive
or
proactive
Retroactive
interference demonstrated by
McGeoch
and
McDonald
(
1931
)
Extent
of
forgetting
is
larger
when
memories
/
materials
are very
similar
View source
Retrieval failure
suggests that forgetting occurs when the
'cues'
present at the time of
encoding
the information are not present at the time of
recall
View source
This describes
Tulving's
'
encoding specificity principle'
(ESP)
View source
There are two types of forgetting associated with
retrieval failure
:
context-dependent
and
state-dependent
View source
Context-dependent forgetting occurs when
external
cues at the time of
encoding
do not match those present at
recall
View source
Godden
and
Baddeley
(1975) demonstrated this with
deep-water divers
, showing
larger
recall in
'matching'
conditions
View source
State-dependent
forgetting occurs when
internal
cues at the time of
encoding
do not match those present at
recall
View source
Carter
and
Cassaday
(1998) demonstrated this using
anti-histamines
to change
internal
cues
View source
Eysenck
suggested that
retrieval failure
may be a main reason for forgetting from the
LTM
View source
Findings from studies of
retrieval
failure may lack
ecological
validity
View source
Godden
and
Baddeley
repeated their experiment but found
no
significant difference in recognition
accuracy
between
matched
and
non-matched
conditions
View source
The
encoding specificity principle
suffers from
cyclical reasoning
due to its
over-reliance
on
assumptions
View source
Eyewitness
testimony can be influenced by
misleading
information such as
leading
questions and
post-event
discussions
View source
Leading questions
suggest a
correct
answer and can influence participants'
responses
View source
Loftus
and
Palmer
(
1974
) demonstrated this with different critical
verbs
affecting
speed
estimates of a car
crash
View source
Post-event discussions can lead to memory
conformity
and inaccurate
recall
View source
Gabbert
et al (2003) showed high
inaccuracy
rates from
post-event
discussions
View source
Own
age bias
and
demand characteristics
can affect the
accuracy
of
eyewitness
testimony
View source
Participants may
recall
others from their own
age
group with
higher accuracy
View source
Participants may give answers they think are
expected
,
biasing
results
View source
Artificial
tasks and stimuli reduce the
ecological validity
of studies on EWT
View source
Anxiety
can have both
positive
and
negative
effects on the accuracy of
EWT
View source
Johnson
and
Scott
(1976) showed that
anxiety
can have a
negative
effect on
recall accuracy
View source
Yuille
and
Cutshall
(1986) demonstrated a
positive
effect of
anxiety
on
recall accuracy
View source
The
Yerkes-Dodson
Law suggests an
'inverted-U'
relationship between
arousal
and
performance
View source
The
weapon focus
effect may test for
surprise
rather than
anxiety
View source
Ethical issues
arise from exposing participants to
distressing
images and recalling
traumatic
events
View source
Cognitive
interviews aim to increase accurate
recall
in
eyewitness
testimony
View source
Stages
include
reporting
everything,
reinstating
context, changing
perspective
, and reversing the
order
of events
View source
The
enhanced
cognitive interview focuses on
social dynamics
between the
eyewitness
and
interviewer
View source
The
cognitive
interview may be
time-consuming
and require
specialist
skills
View source
Milne
and
Bull
(
2002
) found that context
reinstatement
and reporting everything produced the
greatest accuracy
of
recall
View source
What is this
A card
This
A card
See all 78 cards