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The Modal Model and Working Memory

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HM (Milner) no transfer to ltm. JB (Shallice and Warrington) impaired stm ... count backwards by 3's. precipitous forgetting in 18 seconds. Reitman ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Modal Model and Working Memory


1
The Modal Model and Working Memory
  • Lecture 2

2
Evidence for the Stm/Ltm distinction
  • Neurocognitive evidence
  • HM (Milner) no transfer to ltm
  • JB (Shallice and Warrington) impaired stm
    otherwise normal
  • Brown/Peterson paradigm
  • trigrams presented
  • count backwards by 3s
  • precipitous forgetting in 18 seconds
  • Reitman
  • part of forgetting due to similarity of items
  • engaging tone detection task prevented rehearsal
    but did not impair recall
  • suggests interference, not lack of rehearsal
    produces initial forgetting
  • nevertheless, no transfer to ltm

3
  • Car
  • Hat
  • Book
  • Key
  • Table
  • Hand
  • Bird
  • Foot
  • Lamp
  • Tree
  • House
  • Flower
  • Goat
  • Paper
  • Frog
  • Rug
  • Desk
  • Shoe

4
Evidence for STM/LTM serial position curve
  • Dissociations
  • logic some manipulations influence one section
    but not the other, suggests distinct sytems
  • primacy affected by
  • speed of presentation
  • recency eliminated by
  • delay
  • interference

5
Speed of presentation
6
Delay
7
Interference
8
Atkinson and Shffrin explanation
  • Transfer to ltm due to time in the limited
    buffer. As new information enters the buffer,
    items randomly eliminated.
  • The longer in the buffer, the more likely for
    transfer to occur.
  • Rundus rehearsal technique
  • had people rehearse items out loud while hearing
    serial list
  • frequency of rehearsal predicted everything but
    recency

9
Problems with the modal model
  • Not consistent
  • if two distinct stores then properties should be
    more consistent
  • variations in capacity depending on items
  • forgetting characteristic vary depending on the
    stimuli
  • Impaired STM does not hurt learning
  • Possible to access LTM without going through STM
  • pattern recognition
  • Coding not always acoustic
  • Rehearsal does not always lead to better memory
  • Craik Watkins incidental learning task
  • repeat words beginning with specific letter
  • duration of repetition did not alter memory

10
Depth of processing
  • Repetition depends on the depth of processing
  • Type 1 processing
  • maintenance rehearsal
  • mere repetition
  • less well remembered
  • Type 2 processing
  • semantic processing
  • elaborative rehearsal
  • better remembered
  • Evidence
  • Craik and Watkins lack of benefit of maintenance
    rehearsal
  • Craik and Tulving
  • orienting task
  • physical (repeating letters)
  • auditory (rhyming)
  • semantic (meaning)
  • surprise memory recall test
  • semantic performance superior

11
Problems with depth of processing
  • circular definition
  • transfer appropriate processing
  • Morris, Bransford Franks 1978
  • encoded semantically or acoustically
  • tested semantically or acoustically
  • optimism if matched

12
Working memory approach
  • Does STM provide working space for manipulating
    information?
  • Assumptions
  • temporary storage is involved in information
    processing
  • allows independent sources to interact
  • common system operates across wide range of tasks
  • Basic model
  • systems
  • central executive provides the basic area in
    which calculations are made
  • articulatory loop
  • slave system for audition
  • visual spatial sketch pad
  • slave system for vision

13
Working memory model
14
Evidence for Central executive
  • Load (concurrent digits) modestly impairs
  • learning (primacy but not recency)
  • recall
  • sentence verification
  • categorization
  • reasoning
  • everything but recognition

15
Evidence for the phonological store
  • phonological similarity effects
  • pgtvcd harder than rhxkwy
  • unattended speech effects
  • hear nine digits accompanied with
  • silence
  • spoken words
  • nonsense
  • recall impaired by distraction regardless of
    meaning
  • word length effects
  • long words less well remembered
  • Welsh digit span study

16
Evidence for the visual-s sketch pad
  • Brooks
  • Examined competition between
  • response
  • pointing, tapping spatial responses
  • speaking verbal response
  • Task
  • Verbal- judged words in a sentence
  • Visual- imagined block letter
  • speaking faster than pointing for visual task
  • pointing faster than speaking for verbal task

17
Brooks results
18
Brandimonte, Hitch Bishop (1992)
  • Examined effects of verbal suppression on memory
    for visual forms
  • encoded pictures with or without verbal
    suppression
  • imagined pictures and subtracted visual component
  • attempted to identify remaining component
  • result imagery performance was superior
    following verbal suppression
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