The way information is changed so it can be stored in memory. Information enters the brain via the senses. It is then stored in various forms, such as visual codes (pictures), acoustic codes (sounds) or semantic codes (the meaning of the experience)
Memory for events that have happened in the past. This lasts anywhere from 2 mins to 100 years. LTM has potentially unlimited duration and capacity and tends to be coded semanticaly
Memory for immediate events. STMs are measured in seconds and mins rather than hours and days - they have a short duration. They disappear unless they are rehearsed. STM also has a limited capacity of about 4 items or chunks and tend to be coded acoustically. This type of memory is sometimes referred to as working memory
Jacobs used a sample of 443 female students (aged from 8-19) from the North London Collegiate School. Participants had to repeat back a string of numbers or letters in the same order and the number of digits/letters was gradually increased, until the participants could no longer recall the sequence.
- Jacobs (1887) supports Miller's conclusions with his research
- Simon (1974) found that people have a shorter memory span for larger chunks such as 8 word phrases, than smaller chunks such as 1 syllable words - supports the idea that STM capacity is limited
- Cowan (2001) reviewed a variety of studies on the capacity of STM and concluded that it is likely to be limited to 4 chunks
- Jacobs (1887) found that recall increased with age - mean digit recall for 8 year olds was 6.6 whereas average recall for 19 year olds was 8.6. This increase could be because of development of skills such as chunking
- Lack of population validity and generalisability because the sample are all American and students
- Unable to explain whether long-term memory becomes less accurate overtime because of a limited duration, or whether long-term memory simply gets worse with age. This is important because psychologists are unable to determine whether our long-term memory has an unlimited duration (like the multi-store model suggests), which is affected by other factors, such as getting old, or whether our long-term memory has a limited duration.
- Brandimore et al. (1992) found participants used visual coding in STM if given a visual task (pictures) and prevented from doing any verbal rehearsal in the retention interval (they had to say 'la la la') before performing a visual recall task
- Frost (1972) showed that long-term recall was related to visual and semantic categories
- Nelson and Rothbart (1972) showed evidence of acoustic coding in LTM
- Did he really test LTM because participants only waited 20 mins
- Research support from HM who had his hippocampus removed on both sides to correct his severe epilepsy. His personality and intellect remained intact but he couldn't form mew LTMs but he could recall old LTMs
- Beardsley (1997) found that the prefrontal cortex was active in STM but not LTM so they are separate stores
- Controlled lab studies showed a difference between STM and LTM
- The model is over-simplified. It assumes that each of the stores works as an independent unit.
- The model does not explain memory distortion.
- The model does not explain why some things may be learned with a minimal amount of rehearsal. For example, once bitten by a dog, that memory is quite vivid in spite of the lack of rehearsal.
- There are several times that we rehearse a lot to remember material and it is not transferred to LTM.
- KF remebered auditory stimuli more than visual stimuli suggests that the MSM is too simple in suggesting that STM is just one store