Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Baddeley (1966): The influence
of acoustic and semantic
similarity on long-term memory
- Aim
- To determine how
long-term memory is
affected by semantic
and acoustic encoding
- Procedure
- 3 experiments
conducted
- Men and women
from the Applied
Psychology
Research Unit
Subject Panel
- Assigned
1 of 4 list
conditions
- Independent
groups
- Lab
experiment
- Experiment 1
- Ppts attempted
to learn 1 of 4
lists of 10 words
- Lists were either
acoustically or
semantically similar
or control words of
equal frequency
- Lists
learned for
4 trials
- After which,
the ppts were
given a 20
minute digit
memory task
- Then asked
to recall the
word list
- Experiment 3
- 4 lists
of 10
words
- List A: 10
acoustically
similar words
- List B: 10 acoustically
dissimilar words
matched in terms of
frequency of
everyday use to List
A(control group)
- List C: 10
semantically
similar
words
- List D: 10 semantically
dissimilar words -
matched in terms of
frequency of everyday
use to List C (control
group)
- 4 groups
of ppts
- Shown 10 words - 3 seconds each
- Distractor task - 6 tasks involving memory of digits
- Given words and asked to recall in order in 1 minute
- Results gathered - evidence for STM
- Repeat stages 1-4 X 4 - learning trials - LTM
- 15 minute interference task - copying 8 digit sequences
- Surprise recall test of 10 words - order
- Results gathered - evidence for LTM
- Results
- Recall of List A
lower than
recall of List B -
not significant
difference
- No difference
for C and D
- Acoustic encoding
was initially difficult
- But didn't affect long-term recall
- Recall of List C was
55% accurate and List
D was 85% accurate -
significant difference
- No difference
for A and B
- LT recall was a lot
worse for
semantically similar
words than
semantically
dissimilar words
- Semantically dissimilar
words are unrelated and
aren't likely to be mixed
up in recall
- Conclusion
- Later retest recall of List
3 was impaired
compared to all other
lists because they were
semantically similar
- Suggesting that LTM is largely
but not exclusively semantic
- Because recall of
acoustically similar
words were initially
more difficult to encode
- Suggests that STM
is largely acoustic
- Evaluation
- Strengths
- Men and
women used
- No
gender
bias
- Highly
controlled lab
experiment
- Standardised
procedure
- timing of
visual
stimulus
- Can be
applied to
dementia
and dyslexia
- No order
effects
(independent
groups)
- Ethics
- No deception
- Debriefed
- No physical
harm
- Weaknesses
- Small
sample
- All from
USA
- Individual
differences
- Low
ecological
validity
- Unnatural
setting
- Tasks
required are
artificial
- Ethics
- possible
embarrasment
- psychological
harm