Memory

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  • Memory
    • Multi-store Model - Atkinson & Shiffrin
      • Short term memory
        • Capacity - Jacobs/Miller - 7±2 - Digit span
        • Duration - Peterson & Peterson - 18 seconds (2% higher) - Trigrams
        • Coding - Acoustic, visual back up - Baddeley, acoustically similar - Brandimote, lalala
      • Sensory Register
        • Coding - Visual and Acoustic - Crowder
        • Capacity - Unlimited?
        • Duration - 0.5 seconds - Sperling - 12 item
      • Long term memory
        • Duration - Unlimited - Bahrick
        • Capacity - Unlimited
        • Coding - Baddeley - Semantically similar words
      • Shallice & Warrington - studied KF - could not store acoustic information, only visual.
      • Spiers - 147 amnesia patients - procedural memories intact.
      • Craik & Lockhart - depth of processing affects ease of creation of LTMs and also strength of LTMs
    • Types of Long Term Memory
      • Episodic - Personal memories about an event with emotional tone (Explicit)
      • Procedural - How to do things (Implicit)
      • Semantic - Facts and information about the world (Explicit)
    • The Working Memory Model
      • Central Executive - directs attention to tasks and sends information to correct slave system, no capacity or coding
        • Episodic Buffer (2000) - provides a link between slave systems, and provides temporary store when either is overwhelmed, codes acoustically and visually
          • Long Term Memory
        • Phonological Loop - acoustic coding, capacity roughly equal to amount you can say in two seconds
          • Phonological store - holds words/sounds that are being heard while they are being processed.
          • Articulatory Store - repeats and processes information, responsible for maintenance rehearsal
        • Visuo-spatial Sketch Pad - where things are and what they look like, visual coding, limited capacity
          • Visual Cache - stores what things look like
          • Inner Scribe - spatial relations, behaves like a GPS
      • Central Executive must be in at least two parts, EUR case study showed ability to reason but not to make day to day decisions
      • Not very comprehensive as it only displays short term memory, whereas MSM displays all and their links. (however very derailed and 2000 added LTM link)
    • Explanations of Forgetting
      • Retrieval Failure - lack of cues causes memory to be inaccessible - Endel Tulving (encoding specificity principle - "Memory is effective if information that was present at coding is also available at time of retrieval"
        • Context Cues - environmental factors, such as the room you're in or music that is playing
        • State Cues - mental factors, such as your emotions or the influence of a drug
        • Abernathy - students perform better in a test when it is give by the teacher who taught them in the room they were taught in
        • Goodwin - participants who were drunk/sober during coding remembered the list better when they were in the same state
        • Real word application - police reconstruct crimes to attempt to trigger any memories that required cues to be accessed
      • Interference - when information in long term memory is confused due to similarities
        • Pro-active interference - when old information interferes with new information (e.g. when a teacher changes the seating pan but you keep going to your original seat)
        • Retro-active interference - when new information interferes with old information (e.g. learning another model for memory and then getting the previous one wrong)
        • Underwood - proactive - participants remember the earlier lists of words much better than the later ones.
        • Schmidt - retro-active - the more time a participant had moved house, the worse their memory of the roads around their primary school was.
    • Eye Witness Testimony
      • Misleading Information - information which might affect an eye witness' recall
        • Loftus & Palmer - participants had to estimate the speed of a car in a video of a car crash, verb in question was either smashed, hit, collided, contacted or bumped, smashed induced the highest estimates, and contacted the lowest.
          • Added smashed glass question, participants more likely to say they saw smashed glass when verb used is smashed
          • Yuille & Cutshall - interviewed real witnesses of a bank robbery 4 months later, leading questions did not affect accuracy of recall
        • Loftus & Palmer - stop/yield signs shown in a picture of a car crash, more likely to identify the wrong sign if a question is given with the wrong sign in it wording.
          • Yuille & Cutshall - interviewed real witnesses of a bank robbery 4 months later, leading questions did not affect accuracy of recall
      • Anxiety - how fear and distress affects accuracy of recall
        • Loftus - weapon-focus effect -  man comes out of a room after an argument with either a pens and ink on his hands or a knife with blood on his hands, participants identify him out of 50 photos better in the pen condition.
          • Yuille & Cutshall - most distressed eye witnesses had the most accurate recall
        • Yerkes Dodson Law - there is a level of anxiety where memory is most efficient, but any more or less than that and your memory will be worse
    • Improving Eye Witness Testimony
      • The Cognitive Interview
        • Change Perspective - might remember things that were seen by the subconscious mind but would have been seen by another witness
        • Report Everything - small details that may seem irrelevant could be useful and lead to other important information when thought about
        • Mental Reinstatement of Context - state and context cues activated to uncover memories blocked retrieval failure
        • Change Order - remember events in reverse chronological order, and certain events may have been missed, also uncovers lies about events
        • Kebbel & Wagstaff - police don't always use all four components (usually only reinstate context and report everything) which will reduce the effectiveness.
          • Milne & Bull - found that the combination of recall everything and mental reinstatement was just as effective as the full cognitive interview
        • Has been used to improve interviewing techniques in Brazil, where interrogation and torture were often used

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