Zusammenfassung der Ressource
A Level: Cognitive Psychology (AQA)
- Short Term Memory
- Duration
- It is very fallible
- Can be rehearsed
and then moved to
the LTM
- Lloyd and Margaret Peterson
(1959) tested that after a 3
seconds interval, participants
remember 90% of the
information while after a 18
seconds interval, only 2% can
be remembered
- Trigram (WRT 303 or SCX 591)-It had
to be meaningless and participants
count backwards after seeing that
- Only test one part of memory (for
consonance and syllables) and
memory can be displaced bc of the
counting backwards
- Long Term Memory
- Duration
- Shepard (1967) and
Bahrick et al. (1975)
- Meaningful information
is easier to remember
- Anywhere from
2 hours to 100
hours
- The Working Memory Model
- Strengths
- Attempts to explain
how memory
functions and has
relevant information
- PET scans have
shown different
parts using verbal
and visual tasks
- There are at least 2 stores in the
WWM due to research from dual
task studies
- Many psychologist
use it as reference
- Better the MSM because it explains the
STM in terms of both temporary storage
and active processing
- Weaknesses
- WMM doesn't explain changes
in processing ability that occur
as a result of time
- The capacity of the
Central Executive has
never been measured
- WM only concerns itself with STM and
is not comprehensive model of
memory
- The most important
component, the Central
Executive is least known
about
- Multi-Store Model
- Strengths
- Very useful as it helps
psychologists construct test table
models of memory
- Morris et al (1985)
showed that
information from the
LTM and STM are
two-way
- There are significant
research evidence for the
distinction between Sensory,
Short-Term and Long Term
Memory
- Miller suggested that
there are distinction
between types of memory
store.
- The recency effect appears in
serial recall tasks
- Weaknesses
- Rehearsal is not the only factor in
transferring information from STM
to LTM
- MSM is too simple and
fails to reflect the
complexity of human
memory
- Most of the
evidence comes
from laboratory
studies
- Cohen suggests that
capacity cannot be
measured purely in
terms of the amount of
information to be
recalled, but rather the
nature of information to
be recalled
- Rehearsal is not always
needed for information to be
stored and some items can't
be rehearsed
- Eyewitness testimony
- Accuracy
- Leading Questions can distort the
accuracy of an eyewitness
- Loftus and Palmer
(1947) with the car
crash experiment
- Refers to when eyewitnesses are used
as evidence in court to identify
someone who had comitted a crime
- witness encodes into the LTM details of the event and the
persons involved. Then retains the information for a
period of time. Afterwards, retrieves it from storage