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Short-term Memory

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Short-term Memory Duration Peterson and Peterson (1959) Aim: To test how long short-term memory lasts when rehearsal is prevented. Short-term Memory Procedure ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Short-term Memory


1
Short-term Memory
  • Duration
  • Peterson and Peterson (1959)
  • Aim To test how long short-term memory lasts
    when rehearsal is prevented.

2
Short-term Memory
  • Procedure
  • Participants were briefly shown a consonant
    trigram (i.e. 3 letters such as MWG or CGX).
  • Participants were asked to count backwards in
    3s from a specified number to stop them thinking
    about the letters.
  • After intervals of 3,6,9,12,15 or 18 seconds,
    participants were asked to recall the original
    trigram.
  • The procedure was repeated several times using
    different trigrams.

3
Short-term Memory
  • Duration
  • Peterson and Peterson (1959)
  • Findings
  • Participants were able to recall 80 of
    trigrams after a 3 second interval.
  • Progressively fewer trigrams were recalled as
    the time intervals lengthened.
  • After 18 seconds, fewer than 10 of the
    trigrams were recalled correctly.

4
Short-term Memory
  • Duration
  • Peterson and Peterson (1959)
  • Conclusions
  • If rehearsal is prevented, information vanishes
    rapidly from short-term memory.
  • Therefore, decay is the mechanism for
    forgetting in short-term memory.

5
Short-term Memory
  • The key point about findings based on the
    Brown-Peterson technique is that items disappear
    from short-term memory only when rehearsal is
    prevented. New items can only take their place if
    existing items move on.
  • Repetition serves as a method of continually
    reinserting the information into the short-term
    memory and thereby strengthening the memory.
  • Without rehearsal, the duration of short-term
    memory is less than 30 seconds.

6
Long-term Memory
  • Encoding in LTM involves semantic coding (see
    Baddeley, 1966) although can use other sensory
    modes (visual, acoustic, even olfactory?)
  • Duration of LTM very difficult to study! How
    many of your classmates will you remember in 50
    years time? (see Bahrick et al, 1975)
  • Capacity of LTM unlimited? Computer analogy
    Merkle (1988) number of synapses suggest between
    one thousand and one million gigabytes- small
    compared to modern computers yet secret is
    organisation..

7
Multi-store model
  • This model arose from the information processing
    approach where memory is characterised as a flow
    of information through a system.
  • The system is divided into a set of stages and
    information passes through each stage in a fixed
    sequence.
  • The Multi-store model suggests that incoming data
    passes through a sensory store where it can be
    registered for very brief periods of time before
    decaying or being passed into a short-term memory
    store.

8
Multi-store model
  • There are two types of sensory storage
  • Iconic storage the store associated with visual
    information
  • Echoic storage the store associated with
    auditory information
  • Atkinson and Shiffrin believed that memory traces
    in the short-term memory are fragile and can be
    lost within 30 seconds unless they are rehearsed.

9
Short-term Memory
  • Difficult to assess capacity of short-term
    memory two main ways are span measures and
    recency effects in free recall.
  • Span measures e.g. digit span (Jacobs, 1887)
    require the participant to repeat back
    immediately a list of random digits in the
    correct order.

10
Short-term Memory
  • Span of immediate memory generally seven, plus or
    minus two, whether the units are numbers, letters
    or words.
  • Miller (1956) proposed that the capacity of short
    term memory depends more on the number of chunks
    rather than individual units.
  • Primacy/recency effect create list of 20 words,
    let partner view it for 30 seconds and ask them
    to write down as many as they can remember in any
    order. (A- straight away, B-interference task)

11
Short-term Memory
  • Primacy and recency effects measured in studies
    of free recall, participants recall words from a
    list in any order immediately after it has been
    presented.
  • Recency effect last few items in a list are
    usually better remembered than items in the
    middle.
  • Primacy effectfirst few items in a list are
    usually better remembered than items in the
    middle.
  • Why?

12
Short-term Memory
  • Recency effect based on information in the
    short-term store- suggests capacity is about 2 or
    3 items.
  • Effect eliminated when interference task
    introduced between end of presentation and start
    of recall
  • Primacy effect depends mainly on extra
    rehearsal, items no longer in short-term store?
  • Also known as serial position effect (Galnzer and
    Cunitz, 1966)

13
Short-term Memory
  • The recency effect suggests that the capacity of
    short-term memory is only 2 or 3 items, however
    memory span measures indicate a capacity of about
    7 items. One reason for this discrepancy is that
    participants carrying out a span task will
    rehearse as many items as possible, whereas those
    asked to learn a list for free recall rehearse
    only a few items at a time.
  •  
  • Both measures indicate that the capacity of
    short-term memory is strictly limited.

14
Short-term Memory
  • Rehearsal
  • There are different types of rehearsal. Craik and
    Watkins (1973) distinguished between maintenance
    rehearsal, where, for example, a word is repeated
    out loud a number of times to keep it in
    short-term memory, and

15
Short-term Memory
  • Elaborative rehearsal, in which information is
    processed in terms of its meaning. They suggested
    that maintenance rehearsal may be enough to keep
    information in short-term memory, while
    elaborative rehearsal is the type necessary to
    transfer information from short-term memory to
    long-term memory.

16
Short-term Memory
  • Craik and Lockhart (1973) proposed the levels of
    processing theory which assumes that attentional
    and perceptual processes operating at the time of
    learning determine what is stored in long-term
    memory.
  • Various levels of processing range from shallow
    or physical analysis of a stimulus (e.g. letter
    detection) to deep or semantic analysis.
  • Craik (1973, p.48), Depth is defined in terms of
    the meaningfulness extracted from the stimulus
    rather than in terms of the number of analyses
    performed upon it.

17
Memory Processes
  • Hyde and Jenkins (1973) presented word lists
    related or unrelated in meaning and asked
    different groups of participants to complete one
    of the following five tasks
  • 1) rate the words for pleasantness
  • 2) estimate the frequency of each word
  • 3) detect the occurrence of the letters e and
    g
  • 4) decide whether the list words fitted sentence
    frames
  • 5) decide part of speech appropriate to each word
    (e.g. verb, noun)

18
Memory Processes
  • Half of the participants were told to learn the
    words (intentional learning) whereas the other
    half were not (incidental learning)

19
Memory Processes
  • Results
  • Test of free recall
  • Recall 51 higher after semantic tasks than the
    non-semantic tasks with the associatively
    unrelated words
  • Recall 83 higher after semantic tasks than the
    non-semantic tasks with the associatively related
    words
  • Incidental learners recalled same number of words
    as intentional learners
  • Conclusion nature of processing activity, rather
    than intention, at time of learning impacts on
    recall

20
Evaluation of Multi-store model
  • Three different kinds of memory stores- model
    based on evidence that there are important
    differences among the stores.
  • Claims
  • Memory consists of 2 separate storage areas
  • Information is moved from STM-LTM via rehearsal
  • STM and LTM are unitary stores that cannot be
    subdivided

21
Evaluation of Multi-store model
  • Evidence
  • 1. Temporal duration (e.g. STM- 18seconds
    (Peterson and Peterson,)
  • 2. Storage capacity (e.g. Miller (1956) 7/-2
    chunks of information and Glanzer and Cunitz
    (1966))

22
Evaluation of Multi-store model
  • 3. Forgetting mechanism (e.g. STM-primacy/recency
    effects, different types of rehearsal)
  • 4. Case studies
  • Scolville and Milner (1957) HM- hippocampus
    removed to treat epilepsy- unable to form new
    long term memories
  • Baddeley and Warrington (1970) studied KF brain
    damage from motorcycle accident- no problem with
    LTM but digit span only 2 items
  • Task- find out about Clive Wearing

23
Evaluation of Multi-store model
  • 5. Physiological evidence e.g. PET and fMRI scans
    show prefrontal cortex active for STM tasks
    (Beardsley, 1997) whereas hippocampus is active
    when LTM engaged (Squire et al, 1992)

24
Evaluation of Multi-store model
  • Problems and limitations
  • Rehearsal does not always lead to storage
    (Craik and Lockhart, 1972).
  • If coding in the short-term memory is mainly
    acoustic, how do we understand language?
  • How does the model explain flashbulb memories
    (Brown and Kulik, 1977)?
  • Some types of information are not amenable to
    rehearsal, e.g. smells and yet we remember them.

25
Evaluation of Multi-store model
  • Problems and limitations
  • Are STM and LTM unitary stores?
  • Warrington and Shallices study of KF found
    short-term memory forgetting of auditory
    information much greater than visual stimuli
  • Tulving (1972) injected participants with
    radioactive gold and instructed to think about
    events or facts- different parts of brain active
    during retrieval of episodic and semantic memories

26
Evaluation of Multi-store model
  • Memory oversimplified in this model?
  • Tendency to minimise the active involvement of
    the individual in learning and remembering.
  • Q. Describe and evaluate the Multi-store Model.
    (12)

27
Working Memory
  • Baddeley and Hitch (1974) argued that concept of
    STM should be replaced with WM. WM consists of
    three components
  • Central executive modality-free component of
    limited capacity (like attention)
  • Articulatory or phonological loop- holds
    information briefly in a phonological or
    speech-based form (in revised model divided into
    speech perception and speech production)

28
Working Memory
  • Visuo-spatial sketch pad specialised for spatial
    or visual coding
  • Central executive most important other systems
    used for rehearsal for specific purposes

29
Working Memory
  • Baddeley, Thomson and Buchanan (1975) studied the
    articulatory loop.
  • Asked participants to recall sets of five words
    in the correct order. Word-length effect better
    with short words than long words. Indicates
    limited capacity of articulatory loop.
  • If each component in working memory has a limited
    capacity and is independent of the other
    components then predictions can be made.

30
Working Memory
  • Dual-task technique used to test these
    predictions. If two tasks using the same
    processor are carried out concurrently,
    performance on one or both tasks will be
    impaired.
  • Example of how theories on abstract concepts can
    lead to hypotheses and controlled research.

31
Working Memory
  • Hitch and Baddeley (1976) tested two predictions
    of the working memory model
  • 1) If two tasks make use of the same component,
    they cannot be performed successfully together.
  • 2)If two tasks make use of different components,
    it should be possible to perform them as well
    together as separately.

32
Working Memory
  • Participants carried out verbal reasoning
    task-involved deciding whether a set of sentences
    provided a true or false description of the
    letter pair that followed it (e.g. B is followed
    by A AB).
  • Assumed that this task makes use of the central
    executive.

33
Working Memory
  • At the same time as carrying out the verbal
    reasoning task, participants were given an
    additional task (one of four conditions) before
    each trial
  • the repeatedly
  • one, two, three, four, five
  • a different random string of digits out loud
    every trial
  • or there was no additional task (control).

34
Working Memory
  • It was assumed that the first two conditions
    would make use of the articulatory loop only
    because little thought or attention is involved.
  • In contrast, saying six random digits involves
    the central executive as well as the articulatory
    loop.
  • Predicted that only condition 3 should interfere
    with performance on the verbal reasoning task.
  • Results reasoning performance slowed down only
    when the additional task was condition 3.

35
Working Memory
  • Evaluation
  • Working memory model concerned with both active
    processing and brief storage of information.
  • Multi-store model minimises active involvement of
    the individual in learning and remembering.
  • Therefore, working memory model relevant to
    everyday tasks such as mental arithmetic, verbal
    reasoning and comprehension.

36
Working Memory
  • Evaluation
  • Working memory model views verbal rehearsal as an
    optional process (one of two specialised systems)
    rather than the main process for retention of
    information.
  • Yet, little known about central executive,
    visuo-spatial sketch pad and the interaction
    between these components.

37
Memory Processes
  • How do we investigate the effects of learning
    processes on long-term memory?
  • Obvious method would be to ask participants to
    learn a list of words using different tasks (e.g.
    counting letters, using imagery etc..)
  • If participants aware they are taking part in a
    memory experiment then they may be tempted to
    process the words more thoroughly than the task
    requires.

38
Memory Processes
  • To control for this, experimenters deceive
    participants about the true purpose of the
    experiment and incidental learning can be
    investigated as opposed to intentional learning.
  • In this way, psychologists can use the
    experimental method to investigate learning and
    memory.

39
Memory Processes
  • Craik and Lockhart (1973) proposed the levels of
    processing theory which assumes that attentional
    and perceptual processes operating at the time of
    learning determine what is stored in long-term
    memory.
  • Various levels of processing range from shallow
    or physical analysis of a stimulus (e.g. letter
    detection) to deep or semantic analysis.
  • Craik (1973, p.48), Depth is defined in terms of
    the meaningfulness extracted from the stimulus
    rather than in terms of the number of analyses
    performed upon it.

40
Memory Processes
  • Key theoretical assumptions
  • Depth of processing of a stimulus has a
    substantial effect on its memorability
  • Deeper levels of analysis produce more elaborate,
    longer lasting and stronger memory traces than do
    shallow levels of analysis
  • Theory supported by findings of Hyde and Jenkins
    (1973) and other studies.
  • Criticisms?

41
Memory Processes
  • Original approach over-simplified- e.g. not only
    depth of processing but other types of processing
    may affect memory
  • Elaboration of processing important (Craik and
    Tulving, 1975)
  • E.g. amount of processing of a particular kind

42
Memory Processes
  • Study
  • Elaboration manipulated by varying the complexity
    of the sentence frame between simple (She cooked
    the ------)
  • and complex (The great bird swooped down and
    carried off the struggling ------)
  • Results
  • Cued recall twice as high for words accompanying
    complex sentences
  • Suggests that elaboration benefits long-term
    memory
  • Later studies have found that type of elaboration
    and not just amount of elaboration is important
    (Bransford et al, 1979)

43
Memory Processes
  • Distinctiveness
  • Eysenck (1979) argued that memory traces that are
    distinctive or unique in some way will be more
    readily retrieved than memory traces resembling
    others
  • Depends on context in which a given stimulus is
    presented

44
Memory Processes
  • Processes occurring at the time of learning have
    a major impact on long-term memory
  • Common sense? Studies of value in terms of
    identifying processes such as elaboration and
    distinctiveness as factors influencing learning
    and memory
  • How to measure depth of processing? Difficult to
    determine whether certain tasks involve shallow
    or deep processing

45
Memory Processes
  • Criticisms
  • Morris, Bransford and Franks (1977) found that
    information is remembered only to the extent that
    is relevant to the memory test
  • Study
  • Participants had to process words in terms of
    their meaning or sound

46
Memory Processes
  • Some tested by a rhyming recognition test-e.g. if
    word ship had been on the list then
    participants should select the word whip from
    the rhyming test
  • Results
  • Found that recognition memory was much better
    for words that had been processed in terms of
    their sound than those processed in terms of
    their meaning
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