Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Memory
- Multi-store Model
- Serial Positioning effect
- Murdock
- Aim: Provide evidence to support the MSM
- Method
- Ppts had to learn list of words
- Words presented one at a time for two seconds
- Ppts had to recall words in any order
- Result: Words at the end recalled first (recency effect)
- Words at Beginning recalled quite well (primary effect)
- Word in middle recalled poorly
- Conclusion: Provides evidence for separate STM and LTM stores
- Evalutation
- Quantative data
- Low ecological validity
- Beardsley
- Results: fMRI scans showed different patterns of activity for STM and LTM tasks
- Conclusion: Hippocampus= LTM, Prefrontal lobe= STM,
Supports multi store explanation of memory
- Short term memory
- Duration up to 30 seconds
- Capacity: George Miller claimed we can hold 7+/- 2
- This can be increased by chunking
- Encoding: Acoustic and Visual
- Long term memory
- Duration: few days to lifetime
- Capacity: Potentially unlimited
- Encoding: Acoustic, Visual, and Semantic
- Strenghts
- Simple discription
- Scientific approach in research
- Weakness
- Studies lack ecological validity
- Not every we learn needs to be rehearsed
- Application
- Revision for exams- rehearsal allows
information transfer from STM to LTM
- Techniques that increase elaboration helps info go to LTM
- Levels of Processing
- Craik and Tulving
- Aim: To see if level at which information is processed has an effect on a person's memory
- Method
- Ppts told study was testing speed of reaction and perception
- Word presented very quickly, question asked about word
- Structural level of word
- "Does it have capital letters?"
- Phonetic level of word
- "Does it rhyme with ....?"
- Semantic level of word
- "Does it fit into this sentence?"
- Ppts given long list of words, asked which they saw earlier
- Results: More words recalled if Ppt had to think about meaning of word, rather than appearance
- Conclusion: The deeper material is process the more likely it is remembered
- Evaluation
- Lack internal validity- if depth of processing or length of time
- Repeated measures
- Developed by Craik and Lockhart
- Agreed STM and LTM were in separate stores
- Suggest the process of information determines whether we rember it or not
- Strenght
- Atkinson and Shiffrin used scientific approach
- Weakness
- Lack of ecological Validity
- Doesn't explain why deeper processing
helps, or if it is the extra time.
- Application
- Improving Study skills- Don't read repeatedly, write in own words.
Uses semantic encoding and deeper processing
- Chunking
- Bower and Springston
- Aim: Test effects of Chunking
- Method
- Two groups of Ppts
- Control group presented with groups of letters such as FB, IPH, DCI, A
- Exeperimental group had letters grouped differently: FBI, PHD, CIA
- Results: Experimental group recalled more words
- Conclusion: Chunking increase capacity of STM, especially
when relying on knowledge in the LTM
- Evaluation
- Low ecological validity
- Quantitative data
- Reconstructive Memory
- Wynn and Logie
- Aim: To see if recall of familiar stories change after serial reproduction
- Method
- Asked Uni students to recall details of first week at Uni
- This was done several times throughout the year
- Result: Accuracy of description remained the same, no matter how many time recalled
- Conclusion: Memories of familiar events will not change over time
- Evalutaion
- Biased sample
- High Ecological Validity
- 1932, Developed by Bartlett
- Very old, theory, lots of support
- Existing knowledge called schemas are used to understand
new information and impose meaning
- Schema: Pocket of related information about something
- Strenghts
- Emphasises influence of, people's previous knowledge
- Real life task
- Weakness
- Difficult to measure accuracy of recalled events
- Implication
- Help understand why people recalling the same event may have different versions
- Previous experience can alter facts when trying to make sense of event
- Amnesia
- HM
- Hippocampus removed from both sides of brain, Anterograde
amnesia, could remember things before surgery but not after
- Conclusion: Hippocampus is crucial for memory
- Retrograde amnesia: Individual can't recall events before amnesia developed
- Anterograde amnesia: Loss of ability to remember event after amnesia occurred
- Eye witness Testimony
- Facial Recognition
- Bruce and Young
- Aim: see if familliaty affects accuracy of indentifying faces
- Method
- Psychology lecturers were caught on security camera
- Ppts asked to identify faces seen on security camera tape
- Series of high quality photographs used
- Result: the lecturers students made more correct identifications
than even experienced police officers
- Conclusion: Previous familiarity helps when identifying faces
- Evaluation
- Participant variables (use of psy students)
- Low ecological validity (still faces)
- Leading Questions
- Loftus and Palmer
- Aim: See if asking leading questions affects accuracy of recall
- Method
- Ppts shown film of car accidnet
- Some asked "how fast was the car going when it hit the other car?"
- Some asked "How fast was the car going when it smashed the other car?"
- Result: those told smashed gave higher speed estimate
- Conclusion: Leading questions affect accuracy of recall
- word smashed made people believe car was faster
- Evaluation
- Quantative data
- Low ecological validity (not real car crash
- EWT: Where individual has seen a crime/ event and gives a
statment of what they have seen during the legal process
- Context
- Godden and Barddley
- Aim: See if people who learn and are tested in the same environment recall more
- Method
- Deep sea divers memorised a list of words
- One group did this on the beach, the other under water
- Each group split in half, half of beach people went under water, half of water people went on beach
- Results: Ppts who stayed in the same environment recalled 40% more words than the others
- Conclusion: Recall of information improved when in the same context where it was learnt
- Evaluation
- Field Experiment= Extraneous variables
- Natural environment
- Context: General setting of environment in which activities happen
- Changing context of when information is learnt and recalled can lead to forgetting
- Try to reinstate exam context when revising
- Interference
- Underwood and Postman
- Aim: Test retroactive theory in experimental set up
- Method
- Ppts learn a list of paired words
- Ppts learn a second list where word pairs had the same first word as first list
- Control group was not given second list
- Both groups old to recall first list
- Results: Control group recollections were more accurate
- Conclusion: learning second list of items hinders ability to recall first list
- Evaluation
- Low ecological validity
- Use of control group to compare data
- Retroactive interference: new info interferes with ability to recall old info
- Proactive interference: Old info affect ability to recall new info
- Application
- Better study habits- Avoid studying two
similar subjects in a short space of time