what are the different informational proicessing techniques used in cognitive psychology?
○ Bottom-up: directly affected by the stimulus input (data-driven)
○ Top-down: influenced by an individual’s expectations/knowledge (what you already know)
○ Serial processing: Only one cognitive process occurs at any one time (one has to be completed for another to start)
Parallel processing: More than one process occurs at the same time (doing several things at the same time)
what is cognitive psychology?
○ Use behavioural evidence to understand cognition.
* Things people do.
what is metatheory?
a set of assumptions and guiding principles
why is metatheory importnat in cognitive research?
what is meant by the term human computer?
what are the 3 stages of memory?
what is encoding?
what is storage?
what is retrieval?
what is the multi-store model?
what are the different attributes between STM and LTM?
STM:
* Limited capacity (only information that is being attended to at that time)
* Hold items for short duration
* Physical/sensory codes (focus on immediate experience)
* Trace decay/interference
* Primarily associated with the
* Prefrontal cortex
LTM
* Unlimited capacity (haven’t yet reached a point where people cannot remember anything else).
* Indefinite duration/permanent
* Meaning/semantic codes (rather than immediate experience, abstraction of knowledge, not verbatim recall)
* Cue dependent forgetting (basis of how memory can be retrieved)
* Primarily associated with the
* Hippocampus
what is atkinson & shiffrin’s (1968) multi-store model?
what are sensory stores?
what is sensory input and attention?
what is short-term store?
what is displacement and interference?
what is recency?
what is primacy?
○ Subject to interference
○ Involves long-term memory
§ Stays with you
○ Earlier items in list get full attention
§ Nothing else has happened that needs remembering
§ Processing is more soldi and efficient
§ More time to remember the letters at the start of the list.
○ Slower presentation rate= longer time for attention, so more items remembered.
Can pay more attention to information.
what is a long-term store?
what are the strengths of the multi-store model?
○ Widely accepted that there are
three distinct memory systems
* Evidence to support separate short- and long-term memory
what are the weaknesses of the multi-store model?
○ Oversimplified, as stores do not operate in a single, uniform way
§ Individual differences in memory
○ Cannot explain implicit learning
§ Learning something that we didn’t want to (random pieces of information)
○ Information only transferred to long- term memory via rehearsal
May not be the case- shown through information that we have not made an effort to learn.
what are levels of processing according to craik and lockhart?
what are the 2 main assumptions of craik and lockhart’s levels of processing model?
what did Craik and Tulvig study?