Memory Flashcards

1
Q

What are the three types of long term memory?

A

Episodic, semantic, procedural

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2
Q

What types of memory are non-declarative?

A

Procedural

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3
Q

What types of memory are declarative?

A

Semantic and episodic

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4
Q

What is episodic memory?

A

Memories of personal events or experiences you may have had in your life that are personal to you

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5
Q

What is semantic memory?

A

Memory of general knowledge that isn’t personal to you

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6
Q

What is procedural memory?

A

A skill-based memory that is focused on recalling how to do something

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7
Q

What is the weakness of the different types of LTM?

A

There isn’t a clear difference between episodic and semantic memories (such as language). Most of our memories are a fusion of episodic and semantic ones. Therefore, the idea of three stores may be an oversimplification.

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8
Q

What are the strengths of the three different types of LTM?

A

Brain scans have shown separate locations in the brain for each of the three types of memory, supporting the idea of different types of memory. If the three types of memory are different then each should have a specific location in the brain. Researchers have found support for this. TO BE CONTINUED

People who experience loss of memory due to brain damage lose only certain kinds of memory. Case of Clive Wearing/ HM, who had problems with his episodic memory but not his procedural. Shows that there are different types of memory.

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9
Q

What is declarative memory? (Don’t need to know)

A

Memories that require conscious recall

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10
Q

What is non-declarative memory? (Not needed)

A

Memories that don’t require conscious recall

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11
Q

What was the aim of Murdock’s serial position curve study?

A

To see if the memory of words was affected by the number of words a person had to remember

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12
Q

What was the method of Murdock’s serial position curve study?

A

Randomly selected words from the 4,000 most common words in English,
103 students on a Psychology course as PPs and were tested in groups over a number of different sessions. In each session, the PPs listened to 20 word lists, each containing different words. The words varied in length from 10-40 words.
After each list, PPs had to recall the words they had just heard.

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13
Q

What were the results of Murdock’s serial position curve study?

A

Murdock found that the likelihood of recall was related to the position of the word in the list. No matter the number of words in list. PPs had:

Higher recall for the first few words on the list than those in the middle of the list. This is called a primacy effect.

Highest recall for the first few words on the list. This is called the recency effect.

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14
Q

What was the conclusion of Murdock’s serial position curve study?

A

The results demonstrate a serial position effect (the position of a word affects the likelihood of its recall). Recency effects are strongest.
The results support the multi-store model because they fit the predictions of the model. The first words are well remembered because they have been rehearsed longest and are therefore LT memories. The more recent words are well remembered because they are still in the STM store.

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15
Q

What is the weakness of Murdock’s serial position curve study?

A

Memory was investigated using lists of words that only represent a small part of what we do with our memories. This research only tells us about one aspect of our memory- how to deal with memorising words- even though, there are lots of other aspects to memory. This way of studying memory is artificial as it relates to some but not all aspects of life.

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16
Q

What are the strengths of Murdock’s serial position curve study?

A

The study was conducted in very controlled conditions which means we can trust the results. The researcher controlled the familiarity of the words, the speed they were read at and that practice had no effect on performance (no demand characteristics or order effects). None of these things would have affected the DV.

Research with amnesiacs supports the conclusions. Research with amnesiacs supports the conclusions. Research has shown that people who have amnesia and can’t store LTM also don’t show a primacy effect, but they do show a recency effect. This shows that the primacy effect is related to LTM.

17
Q

What is a definition of Serial Position effect?

A

The tendency of people to recall the first and last words in a list of words best.

18
Q

What is a definition of Primacy Effect?

A

Words that appear first in list are more likely to be recalled than the words in the middle of a list because they have been rehearsed quite well by the time they are recalled and have become LT memories.

19
Q

What is a definition of Recency Effect?

A

Words that appear towards the end of a list will have been heard most recently and will still be in STM so recall will be the best.

20
Q

What is meant by reconstructive memory?

A

Fragment of stored information are reassembled during recall. The gaps are filled in by our expectations and beliefs so that we can produce a ‘story’ that makes sense.

21
Q

What did Bartlett’s War of the Ghosts study show? (We don’t need this)

A

It showed how people tend to remember the overall meaning of the events and reconstruct the story from this overall meaning.
This shows that memory is an active process- they don’t record everything that happens and instead they reconstruct a memory.