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daisy raeburn
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Cards (79)
Sensory register
Very
short
duration,
unlimited
capacity, modality specific processing
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Short-term memory (STM)
Acoustic
coding, 18s duration,
limited capacity
(7 ± 2 chunks)
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Long-term memory
(LTM)
Semantic
coding, lifetime duration, unlimited capacity, displacement not
decay
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The multi-store model of memory proposes
3
unitary stores:
sensory register
, STM, and LTM
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Attention and maintenance rehearsal
Lead to encoding into
LTM
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The
multi-store
model is too
simplistic
and does not account for unitary LTM
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Brain scans show activity in the
prefrontal cortex
for STM and the
hippocampus
for LTM, providing scientific evidence
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Deeper processing through
elaborative rehearsal
leads to better
memory
compared to just maintenance rehearsal
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Types of long-term memory
Episodic
Semantic
Procedural
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Episodic memory
is for events, is time-stamped, and involves
conscious recall
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Semantic
memory is for general knowledge, is not time-stamped, and involves
conscious recall
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Procedural memory
is for how to do something, is not time-stamped, and involves unconscious recall
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Brain scans show episodic memory is associated with the right
prefrontal cortex
and semantic memory with the
left prefrontal cortex
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The working memory model includes a central executive,
phonological loop
,
visuospatial sketchpad
, and episodic buffer
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Central executive
Delegates information into the other components, has
limited
processing capacity
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Phonological loop
Processes
auditory
information, has a capacity of around
2
seconds
. split into phonological store and articulatory control process
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Visuospatial sketchpad
Processes visual information, has a capacity of
3-4
items. split into visual cache and inner scribe
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Episodic buffer
Connects working memory to
long-term
memory, has a capacity of around
4
chunks
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The working memory model explains
dual-tasking
, where similar tasks
overload
one store
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The
central executive
is the most important but
least
understood component of the working memory model
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Interference is when the presence of a memory prevents the
retrieval
or
encoding
of another memory
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Types of interference
Retroactive
interference
Proactive
interference
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Similarity increases interference, with the worst recall when two lists are
highly similar
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Interference studies in controlled settings may overexaggerate the effect and lack
ecological validity
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Echoic memory
Doesn't explain
Listening to music doesn't impair other acoustic tasks
No comprehensive
More complex
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Interference
as an explanation for
forgetting
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Interference
1. Presence of a memory prevents another memory being
encoded
or
retrieved
2.
Retroactive
- old prevents new
3.
Proactive
- new prevents old or distortion
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Baddeley
- real world, similar results
Rugby
players, worse recall when played more matches vs time between, not
decay
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Controlled setting
Ideal for interference, overexaggerates, lacks mundane realism, ↓
ecological
validity
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Tulving +
Psotka
- absence of cues, recall increased back to
70
%, not lost permanently
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Retrieval failure
as an explanation for forgetting
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Tolving
specificity principle
We present at encoding, not present at retrieval
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State dependent forgetting
Cater + Cassaday,
antihistamines
, change internal state,
recall
lists of words, same state = ↑ recall
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Context dependent forgetting
Godden + Baddeley, scuba divers,
recall
lists of words, same state = 40% ↑
recall
, lower in non matching
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Baddeley
- recognition,
no difference
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RWA -
revision
, use in real world, positive impact,
cognitive interview methodology
, lacks mundane realism, word lists, less drastic changes, over exaggerates, unfalsifiable
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Nairne -
circular
argument, can't test directly, validity, only correlation, ↓
ecological
validity
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Leading questions as a factor affecting the
accuracy
of
eyewitness testimony
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Leading questions
Phrased in a particular way to suggest a certain
answer
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Yuille +
Cutshall
- too pessimistic, asked leading questions, still ↑ accuracy, ↑ influence in lab
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