A representation of how memory works in terms of three stores called a sensory register, short-term memory (STM) and long-term memory (LTM). It also describes how information is transferred from one store to another, how it is remembered and how it is forgotten.
The memory stores for each of our five senses, such as vision (iconic store) and hearing (echoic store). Coding in the iconic sensory register is visual and in the echoic sensory register it is acoustic. The capacity of sensory registers is huge (millions of receptors) and information lasts a very short time (less than half a second)
For events in the present or immediate past. It is a limited capacity store, can only contain about 7 items. Information is coded acoustically and lasts about 30 seconds unless it is rehearsed.
For events that have happened in the more distant past. It is a potentially permanent memory store for information that has been rehearsed for a prolonged time. Capacity is unlimited and LTM's tend to be coded semantically.
Involves an inability to recall or recognise something that has previously been learnt. There are different types of forgetting that happen in different parts of memory: decay (sensory register and short-term memory), displacement (short-term memory), retrieval failure or interference (long-term memory)
The primacy effect is when there is better recall of words at the beginning of the list because those words have been rehearsed in STM and transferred in LTM
Beardsley found the pre-frontal cortex was active during STM tasks, but not LTM tasks, and Squire found the hippocampus was active when the LTM was engaged, supporting separate STM and LTM stores