Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Memory
- STM
- Capacity- 7+/-2 items
- Miller (1956) was the first to
identify the limit of the STM
with the claming of 7+/- 2
items
- Miller found out that people
can cope reasonably well with
counting 7 dots flashed onto a
screen but not many more
than this
- Also found out that people
can recall 5 words as well
as they can recall 5
letters- we chunk things to
remember.
- We can remember
more small chunks for
example in 1 syllable
words rather than
larger chunks. Simon,
1974
- Cowan, 2001 the
STM is generally
limited to 4
chunks
- Encoding- Acoustic
- Alan Baddeley, 1966,
demonstrated the
different ways that
STM and LTM are
encoded by giving
participants various
word lists to memorise
- one list the words
all sounded the
same accoustically
simular, in another
list the same thing
sementicallysimilar
- List A- accoustically
simular- cat, cab, can,
cad, mad, max, mat,
man, map
- List B- Acoustically
Dissimilar- pit, few,
cow, pen, sup, bar,
day, hot, rig, bun
- List C-
Semantically
similar- great,
large, big, huge,
broad, long, tall,
fat,wide, high
- List D-
Semantically
Dissimilar-
good,huge, hot,
safe, thin, deep,
strong, foul, old,
late
- When
participants
were asked to
recall the
words they
were shown all
the words and
had to decide
on the correct
order
- if they were
asked to do
this
immediately
(STM
recall) they
didn't do
well with
acoustically
similar
words,
- which
suggest
that words
are stored
in acoustic
form in
STM
- LTM
- Capacity- unlimited
- Encoding- Semantic
- Duration- A Lifetime