How many chunks of information are we thought to be able to store Miller (1956)?
7 (5-9)
According to Peterson and Peterson (1959) how long does memory last if not rehersed?
18 seconds
What are the 3 major components of the multi storage model (Atkinson and Shiffrin)(1968)?
What idea did the multi storage model introduce?
What is rehersal according to the multi storage model?
Processs of actively using, attending to or analysing information which supported transfer of info into long term storage
WHat is retrieval according to the multi storage model?
Process of actively getting some information out of long term store to use in the here and now
What did each type of memory storage box in the multi storage model vary in?
What is the encoding in long term memory like in the multi storage model?
Mainly semantic (but can be visual and auditory)
What is the primacy and recency effect?
When presented with a list of woeds participants will remember the first few words (LTM) and the last few (STM)
What part of the multi storage model is specifically affected most in Alzheimer’s?
Long term memory - rehersal to put information from the STM into the LTM
How well you remember things depends on what according to Craig and Lockhart (72)?
What are the two classifications of processing?
What is the general idea of the working memory model (Baddeley and Hitch 1974)?
What are the 2 components of the working memory model (Baddeley and Hitch 1974) which are overshadowed by a central executive?
What ar flashbulb memories as described by (Brown and Kulik 1977)?
What can eye movement desensitisation therapy be used to treat?
PTSD - flashbulb memories
What is interference theory?
Pruposes that interference occurs when learning of something new causes one to forget older material due to displacement
What is proactive interference?
When something learned a time ago stops you frim remembering something new (you should open the door this way, but you keep doing it like you always done)
What is retroactive interference?
When something you have recently learned changes, or interferes with, something you remembered in times gone by (you start to open the door the new way and swear blind you always did it like this)
What is the supervisory attentional system (Norman and Shallice 1980)?
Something that can be done without full conscious awareness.
What is memory for events and facts?
Episodic memory
What is memory for automatic ‘how to do things’
Procedural memory
What is the pre frontal cortex involved in?
Attention, SMT and is implied in retention of LTM
What are the medial temporal lobes involved in?
Conscious learning and ‘episodic memory’