Memory Flashcards

1
Q

Human memory

A

Human memory is the process by which we retain information about events that happened in the past

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2
Q

Sensory memory (SM)

A

Initial contact for stimuli. Sensory memory is only capable of retaining information for a very short time

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3
Q

Short term memory (STM)

A

The information we are currently aware of thinking about. The information found in short term memory comes from paying attention to sensory memories. Unless rehearsed lasts a very short period of time.

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4
Q

Long term memory (LTM)

A

Continual storage of information which is largely outside of our awareness, but can be called into working memory table when needed. Can last from 2 mins to many years

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5
Q

Peterson and Peterson (1959)

A

Studied the length of STM with 24 university students, asking them to recall three digit codes. Participants remembered 90% with a 3 sec interval but only 2% with an 18 second interval showing STM is 18 seconds long.

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6
Q

Peterson and Peterson evaluation

A

+ showed forgetting information occurs without rehearsal
+ identified duration of STM (18 seconds)
+ highly controlled therefore limited the effect of extraneous variables
- lacked mundane realism, meaning generalisability to other memory tasks would be difficult
- therefore lacks external validity
- small sample size of 24 students

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7
Q

Bahrick (1975)

A

392 participants were asked to recall from their school year book, with photos and without photos. The results were: After 15 years 90% accurate in photo recognition, After 48 years 70% accurate in photo recognition, After 15 years 60% accurate for free recall, After 48 years 30% accurate for free recall

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8
Q

Bahrick evaluation

A

+ high external validity- real life meaningful memories were studied

  • confounding variables are not controlled in these experiments
  • these pictures could have been rehearsed over the years
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9
Q

Coding

A

The process of converting information from one form to another

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10
Q

Digit span

A

A way of measuring the capacity of STM. Participants have to recall a string of digits in order. Capacity is 7+/-2

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11
Q

Coding evaluation

A
  • artificial stimuli
  • generalisation
  • lacks validity as research is very old
  • corral (2011) reviewed research suggesting STM was 4 chunks
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12
Q

Encoding

A

The way information is changed so it can be stored in memory. Information enters the. Rain via the senses but is then stored in different forms:

  • visual
  • acoustic
  • semantic
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13
Q

Sub divisions of LTM (2)

A

Explicit (declarative): these have been Igor about to be recalled. Often formed through several combined memories.

Implicit (non-declarative): which is more difficulty to put into words. These can be recalled without conscious thought.

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14
Q

Episodic memory

A

Personal experiences, these are time stamped. Conscious effort to recall. Strength of memory is influenced by emotion

  • right prefrontal cortex: The prefrontal cortex in the forward part of the frontal lobe is associated with initial coding of episodic memory
  • Hippocampus: Memories of the different parts of an event are located in the different visual, auditory, olfactory areas of the brain but are connected together in the hippocampus to create a memory of an episode.
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15
Q

Right prefrontal cortex (e)

A

The prefrontal cortex in the forward part of the frontal lobe is associated with initial coding of episodic memory

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16
Q

Hippocampus (e)

A

Memories of the different parts of an event are located in the different visual, auditory, olfactory areas of the brain but are connected together in the hippocampus to create a memory of an episode.

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17
Q

Semantic memory

A

Concerns factual knowledge an individual has learned. These are not time stamped. Linked to episodic as new knowledge is linked to experience

  • hippocampus: Some disagreement over which brain areas are involved in the semantic memory however the hippocampus is thought to be involved
  • left prefrontal cortex: Coding associated with the frontal and temporal lobes
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18
Q

Hippocampus (s)

A

Some disagreement over which brain areas are involved in the semantic memory however the hippocampus is thought to be involved

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19
Q

Left prefrontal cortex (s)

A

Coding associated with the frontal and temporal lobes

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20
Q

Procedural memory

A

Concerned with learning motor skills. Without conscious effort. Difficult to explain in words. Also involved in language

  • motor cortex and prefrontal cortex: these areas are associated with procedural LTM and aid in the memories of how to walk etc
  • cerebellum: helps with timing and coordination of movements, making them smooth and precise, recent research also suggests a role in higher cognitive processes
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21
Q

Clinical evidence

A

+ episodic memory was severely impaired as a consequence of amnesia. They had great difficulty recalling events that had happened in the past
+ semantic memory was unaffected-they understood the meaning of words
+ procedural memory was also intact-they could walk, tie shoelaces etc
+ this supports Tulvings view that there are different memory stores in the LTM
- case studies are very unique to the individual and it therefore can be difficult to make generalisations regarding information gathered

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22
Q

Neuroimaging evidence

A

+ Brain scans have been conducted whilst performing memory tasks
+ Tulving (1994) found that episodic and semantic memories were both recalled from the prefrontal cortex (divided into left and right)
+ supports the idea in different physical locality of different parts of memory

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23
Q

Real life application (LTM)

A

+ Specific treatments developed to help with episodic memory impairment especially as people get older through mild cognitive impairment

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24
Q

Two or three types of LTM

A
  • Cohen and Squire (1980) think there are into 2 types of LTM
  • procedural-non declarative
  • declarative (combination of episodic and semantic)
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25
Q

Spelrling (1960): sensory memory experiment

A
  • Ppts were given a grid of 12 letters and then given high middle or low and the letters should then be recalled. They also had to recall the whole grid.
  • theoretically ppts should have got 4/4 for the rows however most only got 3 suggesting sensory memory cannot hold information for long and that it decays rapidly in that store
    + supports the existence of the sensory store
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26
Q

Glanzer and cunitz (1966)

A
  • serial position effect: people have a tendency to remember things at the start or end of a list
  • primacy effect: people remember first 5 words. Occurs because the first words are best rehearsed and transferred to the LTM
  • regency effect: people remember the last 5 words. This is because these are the last words to be presented so are fresh in memory
27
Q

Sensory register

A
  • a stimulus from the environment
  • Several stores-one for each of our own senses
  • iconic- visual information is coded visually
  • echoic- sounds or auditory information is coded acoustically
28
Q

Shallice and Warrington (1970)

A
  • studies a patient knows as KG who had amnesia. They found his STM for digits were very small when they were reading too him.
  • Recall was better when he read to himself
29
Q

Evidence against multi store model

A
  • more than one type of STM. One for non verbal sounds, one for visual information and one for auditory information
  • more than one type of rehearsal. Is amount of rehearsal important? Craik and Watkins (1973) found this is wrong. What really matters is maintenance and elaborative rehearsal
30
Q

Working memory model and multi store model

A

Photos 14th and 15th September

31
Q

Central executive

A
  • key component in a model
  • functions: direct attention to tasks, decides what working memory pays attention to
  • limited capacity, data arrives from senses but cannot stay for long
  • determines how resources are allocated
  • baddley (1986), describes as a company boss I.e. what issues deserve attention and which don’t
  • collects information from many sources and holds it in a large database I,e. sees, smells hears etc and sends to the LTM.
32
Q

Phonological loop

A
  • limited capacity
  • deal with auditory information and preserves word order-inner ear
  • baddeley (1986) further subdivided into: phonological stores, articulatory processes
33
Q

Visuo-spatial sketch pad

A
  • visual and/or spatial information stored here- inner eye
    Visual: what things look like
    Spatial: friendship between things
  • limited capacity
  • Logie (1995) suggested subdivision: visuo-cache(store), inner scribe for spatial relation
34
Q

Episodic buffer

A
  • Baddeley (2000) added episodic buffer as he realised the model needed more general store
  • slave systems deal with specific types of information
  • buffer extra storage system but with limited capacity
  • integrates information from all other areas
35
Q

Evidence for WMM

A
  • Shallice and Warrington support the existence of a separate visual and acoustic store
  • duel task performance-VSS: participants were given a visual tracking task and at the same time were given one or two other tasks.
  • participants found it more difficult to do two visual tasks than one visual and one verbal at the same time
  • Braver (1977) brain studies support WMM as greater activity in left prefrontal cortex…
36
Q

Evidence for episodic buffer

A
  • Baddeley (1987) participants were shown words and asked to immediately recall. Recall was much better for related sentences
  • supports idea of ‘general’ memory store that draws on LTM for items that are neither phonological or visual
37
Q

Interference

A

One memory blocks another. This might result in forgetting or distorting one or the other or both.

38
Q

Proactive interference

A

Forgetting occurs when older memories, disrupt the recall of newer memories.

39
Q

Retroactive interference

A

Forgetting occurs when newer memories disrupt the recall of older memories already stored.

40
Q

Underwood and postman (1960-retroactive)

A
  • Lab experiment where participants we’re split into two groups. Both groups were then given 2 lists of words to learn, each paired with the previous.
  • They were then asked to state the words from list one, and the control groups did better with only one list proving the existence of retroactive interference
41
Q

Underwood (1975-proactive)

A
  • participants were given 15 lists over a 24 hour period and then tested on them after this period
  • 20% recall on later lists for those who had done earlier ones however 80% for those who have not, showing that the old memories were disrupting the ability to remember the new ones probing the existence of proactive interference
42
Q

Effects of similarity

A
  • Mcgeoch and McDonald (1931) 10 words 100% accuracy
  • then: synonyms, antonyms, words unrelated, consonant syllables, 3 digit numbers, no new lists.
  • most similar produced worst recall
43
Q

Real world application of interference

A
  • Dananar (2008) found that recall of an advertisers message was impaired when participants were exposed to two advertisements for competing brands within a week
  • serious problem considering the amount of money advertisers spend onto to have the effect of the advertisement diluted by interference
44
Q

Evaluation for interference

A

+ McGeoch and McDonald’s research
+ lab experiments control the effects of irrelevant influences and shows that interference is a valid explanation for forgetting
- learning lists of words is more realistic than leaning consonant syllables
+ cues can remove effects of interference
- some participants with a larger working memory are less affected by interference

45
Q

Baddeley and hitch (1977)

A

Rugby players were asked to recall the games played in a season. First and last games were recorded equally and much better than subsequent games showing that interference is a real reason for forgetfulness

46
Q

Eye witness testimony (EWT)

A

The ability of people to remember the details events which they observed

47
Q

Misleading information

A

Incorrect information given to the EW usually after the event

48
Q

Leading questions

A

A question that suggests a certain answer

49
Q

Post event discussion (PED)

A

Occurs when there is more than one witness to an event. Witnesses may discuss what they have seen with other co-witnesses. This effects accuracy.

50
Q

Schemas

A

Schemas are cognitive frameworks that help us to organise and interpret information. They are developed through experience and can affect our cognitive processing

51
Q

Loftus and Palmer (1974)

A

Explain car crash study (3 screenshots 18th September)

52
Q

Response bias explanation

A

This suggests that the wording of the question has no real effect on the participants’ memories but it influences how they decide to answer

53
Q

Loftus and Palmer evaluation

A
  • participants were students so were not representative of whole population due to age, driving ability etc.
    + study is useful for police investigations and education in terms of questioning
  • there are many other issues like how different students can detect speed e.g. engineers, who drives the car and the type of car
  • lab study so lacks real life application as in real life a person is likely to be surprised or shocked
54
Q

Post event discussion

A
  • When co-witnesses to a crime discuss it with each other their EWTs may become contaminated
  • shaw (1997) showed a staged robbery and found if a confederate gave correct answers then recall percentage would increase
  • Gabbert (2003) has participants watch same video from different angles and 71% mistakenly recalled aspects that they did not see but picked up in the discussion
55
Q

Evaluation of EWT

A
  • older people are less accurate when giving EW

- demand characteristics as a lab experiment

56
Q

Johnson and Scott (1976)

A
  • 2 conditions, one where the participant is holding a pen with greasy hands and the other a knife and bloody hands
  • recall was less accurate from the bloody hands and knife. They believed anxiety caused this
57
Q

Weapon focus effect

A

In violent crimes the witness is more likely to look at the main focus which is the weapon rather than peripheral details e.g. what the person looked like

58
Q

Loftus and burns (1982)

A

Found that participants who were shown a boy getting violently shot in the face had worse recall of previous events leading up to the incident

59
Q

Christianson and Hubinette (1993)

A
  • questioned 110 real victims of bank robberies

- found that those who saw the event recalled less than the people who were actually threatened

60
Q

Evaluation of anxiety’s effect on EWT

A
  • weapon focus effect may not be relevant as Johnson and Scott may be testing sunrise not anxiety
  • field studies lack control. Extraneous variables may be responsible for accuracy of recall
  • ethical issues. Psychological harm
  • demand characteristics are present in lab studies on anxiety
61
Q

The cognitive interview

A

A method of viewing eyewitnesses to help them retrieve more accurate memories:

  1. report everything
  2. Context reinstatement (recall the scene)
  3. Recall from changed perspective (as if an episode)
  4. Recall in reverse order
62
Q

The enhanced cognitive interview

A

An emended version of the CI that seeks to build a trusting relationship between the interviewer and witness and quality of communication between the two:

  1. Interviewer does not distract the witness
  2. Witness controls he flow of the interview
  3. Asks open ended questions
  4. Witness speaks slowly
  5. Participants reminded not to guess and to use the ‘don’t know’ portion when necessary
  6. This reduces the anxiety in witnesses
63
Q

Evaluation of cognitive interview

A

+ mello and fisher (1996) found that CI was better than normal techniques on older and younger people
+ kohnken (1999) found an average of 34% increase I correct information generated
- police officers believe the interview takes more time than is available and requires training to do
- difficult to test effectiveness as different variations of CI are used by different people