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Psychology
Memory
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Created by
Alice Coleman
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Cards (81)
Coding
The way information is
represented
in memory
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Baddeley
(
1966
) study
Gave different types of words to groups
Asked to
recall
in correct order
Immediate recall from
short-term
memory
Recall after
20
minutes from
long-term
memory
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Word groups
Acoustically
similar
(cat, cab, can)
Acoustically
dissimilar
(pit, few, cow)
Semantically
similar
(large, big, huge)
Semantically
dissimilar
(hot, grass, good)
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Findings suggest information is coded
acoustically
for short-term memory and
semantically
for long-term memory
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Short-term
memory vs
long-term
memory
Clear
difference identified
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Artificial stimuli
used instead of meaningful material, so results have
limited
application
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Capacity
The amount of information that can be held in
memory
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Jacobs (
1887
) digit span study
Reader reads out digits, participant recalls aloud in order
Mean digit span
9.3 items
, letter span
7.3
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Miller
(
1956
) magic number
Short-term memory capacity is
7
+/-
2
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People can recall
5
digits as well as 5 words via
chunking
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Replication of digit span study
Ensures results are correct, due to possible
confounding
variables like
participant distraction
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Cowan (2001) concluded short-term memory capacity is
4
+/- 1,
overestimating
capacity
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Duration
The length of time information can be
retained
in memory
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Peterson
and
Peterson
(1959) study
Gave
3
digit and letter sequences
Participants counted backwards to stop rehearsal
Recall tested at 3, 6, 9, 12, 18 second intervals
80% recall after
3
seconds,
3
% after 18 seconds
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Peterson and Peterson's findings suggest short-term memory can last for
18
seconds, longer with
rehearsal
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Bahrick
et al (
1975
) study
Used
school yearbook photos
and free recall of graduation class names
90
% photo recognition accuracy within 15 years, 70% after
48
years
60% free recall after
15
years, 30% after
48
years
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Long-term
memory can last a
lifetime
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Bahrick
study
High
external
validity due to meaningful stimulus, lower with
meaningless
stimulus
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Peterson and Peterson study
Low external validity due to
artificial stimulus
, but some validity for remembering sequences like
passwords
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Multi-store model of memory
Separates memory into
sensory register
,
short-term
memory, and long-term memory
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Sensory register
Takes input from each
sense
, modality-specific, high capacity,
0.5
second duration
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Short-term memory
Acoustically
coded, capacity 7 +/- 2, duration
18-30
seconds
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Long-term memory
Semantically
coded, potentially unlimited capacity, potentially
lifetime
duration
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Multi-store
model
Shows
separation
between
short
and long-term memory, like mix-up of similar sounding words vs similar meaning words
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Multi-store model lacks
mundane realism
, is too simplistic, and may not be valid due to using digits/words with
no meaning
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Prolonged
rehearsal
not needed to transfer to long-term memory, type of
rehearsal
more important
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Types of long-term memory
Episodic,
semantic
,
procedural
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Episodic memory
Mental diary
of everyday lives and activities,
'time-stamped'
, conscious effort to recall
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Semantic
memory
Shared
knowledge
of the world, generic
facts
not personal
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Procedural
memory
Memory
for actions/skills, recalled
automatically
without effort
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Case study of Molaison and Wearing
Episodic memory impaired,
semantic
memory untouched, shows different types of
long-term
memory
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Brain injury studies lack
control
variables, difficult to determine
pre-injury
memory
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Conflicting
research on location
of different long-term memory types
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Working memory model
Baddeley
and Hitch 1974, includes central executive, phonological
loop
, visuo-spatial sketchpad, episodic buffer
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Central executive
Supervisor
that monitors and allocates attention, doesn't hold
data
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Phonological loop
Stores and rehearses auditory information, capacity
2
seconds of words
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Visuo-spatial sketchpad
Stores visual and spatial information, capacity
3-4
items
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Episodic buffer
Temporary store for visual, spatial and verbal information, capacity
4
chunks, links to
long-term
memory
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Shallice and Warrington (1970) study
KF's brain injury impaired
auditory short-term
memory but not
visual
, supporting the model
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Dual
task performance
Decline
when performing two tasks of the same type, supporting separation of
subsystems
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