Multi-store Model of Memory

Cards (8)

  • Studies (excluding Bahrick):
    :( lack mundane realism
    > artificial task - difficult to generalise the findings to real-life examples, as the research does not reflect most memory activities where what we are trying to remember is meaningful
    > lowers external validity
  • Studies (excluding Bahrick):
    :) high control over extraneous variables
    > controlled setting (specify to study)
    > more likely to establish cause and effect between the IV and DV
    > increases internal validity
  • Studies (excluding Bahrick):
    :) high reliability
    > controlled environment
    > research could be repeated in the same conditions to check for similar results = consistency
  • Studies - Bahrick:
    :) high in mundane realism
    > research assessed real-life memories of classmates, which is something you could find yourself doing in everyday life
    > may be easier to generalise the findings of the duration of the LTM to other real-life applications
    > increases external validity
  • Studies - Bahrick:
    :( low control over extraneous variables
    > did not take place in a controlled environment
    > e.g. how much contact participants had with classmates after leaving school
    > cause and effect cannot be clearly established
    > reduces internal validity
  • Multi-Store Model of Memory:
    :) RTS Baddeley
    > participants mixed up acoustically similar words when using the STM, but semantically similar words when using LTM
    > supports that they are separate unitary stores, as coding is different
  • Multi-Store Model of Memory:
    :) RTS Clive Wearing
    > suffers amnesia, in which he cannot transfer information from his STM to his LTM e.g. when his wife re-enters the room after leaving seconds before, he greets her as if it is the first time he has seen her in years
    > supports because it shows the STM and LTM are separate stores and that information must flow through in a linear way
    discussion - low population validity
  • Multi-Store Model of Memory:
    :( too simplistic
    > Shallice and Warrington - patient KF (suffered from amnesia) - found that his recall, in STM, for digits was poor when they were read aloud to him, but was better when he could see them
    > suggests there must be different stores within the STM, which casts doubt on the theory's assumption that STM is unitary