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Cognitive Psychology

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Cognitive Psychology The working Model of Memory By Baddeley and Hitch (1974) findings Baddeley found that the generated digit string became considerably less random ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cognitive Psychology


1
Cognitive Psychology
  • The working Model of Memory
  • By Baddeley and Hitch (1974)

2
Learning objectives
  • Understand what is meant by the concept of
    working memory.
  • Describe the working memory model and understand
    the functions and limitations of its components.
  • Describe and evaluate the evidence on which the
    working model is based.
  • Understand the strengths and weaknesses of the
    model.

3
Background to the WMM
  • Baddeley and Hitch (1974) believed that there was
    more to STM than in the multi-store model (i.e.
    more than just being one store house).

4
The components of the WMM
  • A complex and flexible system with different
    components

5
A MORE ACTIVE MODEL OF MEMORY
6
3 main components
  • The central executive (supervisor)
  • Has overall control
  • Limited capacity
  • Can process information from any sensory modality

7
Central Executive
  • Responsible for a range of control processes
    e.g.
  • setting task goals,
  • monitoring and correcting errors,
  • starting rehearsal process,
  • switching attention between tasks,
  • inhibiting irrelevant information
  • Retrieving information from LTM
  • Coordinating activity needed to carry out more
    than one process at a time.

8
Two slave systems
  • The slaves to the CE can be used as storage
    systems
  • Which frees up some of the CEs capacity to deal
    with more demanding information processing tasks.
  • The slave systems have separate responsibilities
    and work independently of one another.

9
1. Phonological Loop
  • (the inner voice) has limited capacity
  • A temporary storage system for verbal information
    in a speech-based form.

10
2. The visuo-spatial sketchpad
  • The inner eye
  • Limited capacity
  • Temporary memory system for holding visual and
    /or spatial information

11
Revised model (1999)
  • Phonological loop now passive storage system
    called
  • Phonological store which is linked to a rehearsal
    system called
  • The Articulatory Loop
  • Maintained by subvocal repetition.
  • The visuo-spatial sketchpad passive visual
    store called
  • Visual cache (collection of data) which is linked
    to an active inner scribe that acts as a
    rehearsal mechanism.

12
The dual task method
  • To test the function of STM, Baddeley and Hitch
    asked participants to perform
  • A reasoning task (sentence-checking)
  • While reciting a list of 6 digits.
  • According to the multi-store model the capacity
    of the STM would be taken up with the digit task.

13
Recite the six digit number 482917 aloud while
ticking True or False
  • 1. B is followed by A BA
  • 2. A is preceded by B AB
  • 3. A is not followed by B BA
  • 4. B follows A AB
  • 5. B does not follow A BA
  • 6. B is not followed by A AB
  • 7. A follows B AB
  • 8. B is not preceded by A AB
  • 9. A is not followed by B BA
  • 10. B does not precede A AB

14
Findings
  • Participants made very few errors on either task
    (although the speed of sentence checking was
    slightly slower than when done on its own).

15
Conclusions
  • Baddeley and Hitch concluded that STM must have
    more than one component and
  • Must be involved in processes other than simple
    storage, e.g. reasoning, understanding and
    learning.
  • STM is a kind of workspace where a variety of
    operations can be carried out on both old and new
    memories.

16
A MORE ACTIVE MODEL OF MEMORY
17
Very important
  • Two tasks can be carried out at the same time as
    long as
  • They are being carried out by different
    modalities (parts of the memory system).
  • LTM is a more passive store for previously
    learned material.
  • The ACTION is in the STM.

18
Evidence for the phonological loop
  • Baddeley et al. (1975)
  • Visual presentations of word lists for a brief
    time
  • Participants asked to write them down in serial
    order.
  • Condition 1 lists consisted of 5 words
    familiar, one-syllable English words, e.g. harm,
    wit, twice.
  • Condition 2 5 words, polysyllabic, e.g.
    organisation, university, association.

19
findings
  • More short words were recalled
  • This was called the word length effect
  • Conclusion
  • Capacity of the loop is determined by the length
    of time it takes to say a word rather than by
    the number of items.
  • The estimated time was 1.5 seconds

20
Method
  • Laboratory experiment using a repeated measures
    design
  • Evaluation
  • Well controlled
  • Longer words may be less familiar than short
    words. This could have affected the recall rather
    than the length.
  • No ethical issues if fully informed consent
    obtained.

21
The word length effect under articulatory
suppression
  • Participants were given a task that would usually
    make use of the articulatory loop
  • Asked to repeat a meaningless chant aloud e.g.
    la-la-la
  • The word length effect disappeared and recall for
    short words was no better.
  • This suggests that a verbal rehearsal system is
    important and when suppressed, processing has to
    take place elsewhere (maybe the central executive)

22
Evidence for the visuo-spatial sketchpad
  • The visual store also has limited capacity.
  • Shepard and Feng (1972) asked participants to
    imagine folding flat shapes in order to make a
    cube.
  • They had to decide whether the arrows would meet
    head on.

23
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24
findings
  • The time taken to make the decision was related
    to the number of folds they would have had to
    make if they had actually been doing the task.
  • Visual images work in a similar way to real life
    perception.
  • People are likely to find it difficult to do two
    tasks simultaneously if they both use the
    visuo-spatial sketchpad.

25
Research Baddeley et al. 1973
  • Participants were given a tracking task
    (following a spot of light with a pointer around
    a circular path while imagining block capitals
    such as H, T, F and E.

26
  • Participants were asked to start at the bottom
    left-hand corner, to respond to each angle with a
    yes if it included the bottom or top line of
    the letter and a no if it did not.

F H
27
findings
  • Participants had enormous difficulty in tracking
    the spot of light and accurately classifying the
    corners.
  • The two tasks were competing for the same limited
    resources of the visuo-spatial sketchpad.
  • This is supported by the fact that participants
    could carry out the tracking task while
    performing a verbal task.

28
Logie (1995)
  • Suggested that the visual cache stores
    information about visual form and colour
  • The inner scribe processes spatial and movement
    information.

29
Klauer and Zhao (2004) supported this
  • Participants carried out one of two tasksA
    visual taskA spatial task
  • At the same time they were asked to do either
  • A spatial interference task
  • A visual interference task
  • No secondary task (control condition)

30
findings
  • Performance of the spatial task was much poorer
    for those carrying out a spatial distractor task
    at the same time compared with those doing the
    visual distractor task and vice versa.
  • PET scans show evidence for separate systems.
    Brain activity differs.
  • More activity in the left half for visual
  • More activity in the right half for spatial

31
Evidence for central executive
  • Critical role in attention, planning and
    coordination.
  • Most flexible component of the working memory.
  • More difficult to find evidence for.
  • Easier to study the slave systems.
  • Research on the CE tends to focus on the
    different functions.

32
Baddeley (1996)
  • Investigated the functions of the CE in selective
    attention and switching retrieval plans.
  • Participants were asked to generate random
    strings of digits by pressing numbered keys on a
    keyboard.

33
Try this (if you have a computer)
  • Think of a sequence of eight digits that show no
    systematic pattern (Note that patterns easily
    emerge so this is difficult).
  • At the same time
  • Recite the alphabet
  • Count from 1
  • Alternate between letters and numbers
    (A1B2C3D4E5F6 etc)

34
findings
  • Baddeley found that the generated digit string
    became considerably less random in Condition 3
    when particpants were switching from alphabet to
    numbers at the same time.
  • Baddeley concluded that both the random number
    generation task and the alternation task were
    competing for the same central executive
    resources.

35
Evaluation of the working memory model
  • A very influential model
  • Accepted by cognitive psychologists in preference
    to the idea of a STM store.
  • More plausible than the multi-store model because
    it explains the STM in terms of active process
    rather than passive storage alone.
  • Verbal rehearsal is accepted as one optional
    process within the articulatory loop rather than
    the only way to transfer information to the LTM.

36
More positives of the WMM
  • It can account for some of the findings that the
    MSM finds difficult to explain.
  • Research support comes from dual-task studies
    although
  • KF could remember visual but not verbal stimuli
    in STM supports the idea of at least 2 separate
    systems in the STM.

37
  • Brain scans show different areas of the brain are
    used for visual and verbal tasks which supports
    the WMM.
  • The role of the CE is not fully understood and it
    is likely to be comprised of more than one
    component.
  • Fails to account for musical memory as we are
    able to listen to instrumental music without
    impairing performance on other acoustic tasks.
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