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Exam question Resistance to social influence. 5. In a hospital, you are very likely to obey a nurse. However, if you meet her outside the hospital, for example in a shop, you are much less likely to obey. Using your knowledge of how people resist pressures to obey, explain why you are less likely to obey the nurse outside the hospital. Exam Question: Locus of Control • 6. Three students, George, Petra and Dan, have just started in the sixth form. Dan is a confident person who thinks that his fate lies firmly in his hands. By the end of the first week, Dan has put himself forward to be nominated as the class representative. Petra has also put her name forward to be nominated. She believes it is just luck whether or not she will be selected and feels that there is not much she can do about it. George did not put his name forward because his father told him not to. (a) (i) What type of locus of control does Petra’s behaviour show? (ii) What type of locus of control does Dan’s behaviour show? Application Ada feels strongly about the safety of her children and has always sent them to school in flourescent clothing. At first, she was ridiculed, but she stuck to it, though she compromised as the chlidren now only wear the high-vis vests. Slowly, more and more parents started to do it and eventually a majority did so. It has become school policy. 10. Explain how social influence processes influence social change. (6m) Key words: Multi-store Model Sensory register Short term memory Long term memory Coding Capacity Duration ConformityWelcome to memory Lesson 1 • To Outline the Multi-Store Model of Memory • Compare sensory, short term and long term memory • To Evaluate the evidence Memory and Forgetting: Starter 1 What does your memory look like? 2 mins to draw a picture of what you think your memory looks like. Amina to judge! What does memory look like to you? This is what memory looks like to me. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PQb2AvLqJ qM Memory and Forgetting : Starter 2 What do you want to know about memory? What questions do you want answered? Write them on a post-it note to create a curiosity wall. What would life be like if you had no short term memory? What is memory? Is it remembering the places you have been? What is memory? Is it remembering how to ride your bike? What is memory? Is it recognising faces of people you know? What is memory? Is it learning and recalling information? What is memory? Is it recalling past events? How accurate is memory? Can we rely on it? What’s motivated forgetting? Freud Can your physical state affect your recall If you learn stuff when happy, will you recall better when happy? Do we recall items best where we learnt them? What ways can you improve your memory? Try using colour...Can you think of any other ways? Specification From the media... • • • • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0vS0E9bBSL0 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O3GcvRe9G_w Can you think of others? Is it only fiction? Atkinson and Shiffrin (1968) • Atkinson and Shiffrin (1968) proposed multistore model of memory which had two distinct stores: a short term store and a long term store • In addition to these two stores, this model proposed that stimuli from the environment are held for a very brief time (less than one second) in a sensory register What are the main features of the Multi – Store Model of Memory Multi-store model More info on the sensory store • Sensory memory results from our perceptions. • This is the first port of call for information. • It gets its name from the fact that the information it receives is sensual (visual, auditory, smell, touch). • It includes various sub-systems: – iconic memory of visual perceptions – echoic memory of auditory perceptions. • By attending to certain aspects of an experience, sensory information can be brought together into an event in short term memory. • The capacity is said to be vast but the duration is only 0.25 to 3 seconds. Multi-store model: Capacity of Iconic Memory Sperling (1960) • Aim: To investigate the capacity of iconic memory (visual sensory memory). • Method: A three by four grid of numbers was flashed for 0.05 seconds. Followed by a high, medium or low pitched tone to indicate which row was to be recalled. • Results: On average, the participants were able to recall 80% of the letters on the cued row. • Conclusions: Since the participants didn't know which row was going to be called beforehand but still managed to recall it well, you can assume that at one time all of the information was held in the sensory memory. But it decayed very rapidly. • Evaluation: The work by Sperling is the basis of the view that sensory memory stores are large but decay very rapidly. lasting 250 to 500 milliseconds. Multi-store model Sperling (1960) • Aim: To investigate the capacity of iconic memory (visual sensory memory). • Method: A three by four grid of numbers was flashed for 0.05 seconds. Followed by a high, medium or low pitched tone to indicate which row was to be recalled. Iconic store Prepare yourself with a piece of paper and a pen. Do not write anything down until you are told. Look at the letters that will appear briefly on the screen. - If the letters are followed by ‘full’ write down all the letters you can remember. - If the letters are followed by a high tone, write down all the letters you can remember from the top row. - If the letters are followed by a low tone, write down all the letters you can remember from the bottom row. Listen to a high and low tone now: High tone = Low tone = Watch for the first letters. Click mouse to move on. F A J Q M H G I N U Y Z Click mouse to move on. Watch for the letters. Click mouse to move on. T D E L X C H O M B G S Click mouse to move on. Watch for the letters. Click mouse to move on. D K P M V E S L A C W R Click mouse to move on. Watch for the letters. Click mouse to move on. C R B P M H G I U S O L Click mouse to move on. Check your letters against the original matrices. SHORT TERM MEMORY • • • • • How good is your short term memory? What do you use it for? How long does it last? How much capacity does it have? What evidence is there? George Armitage Miller's 'Magical Number Seven' (1956) • • • • • • • • Findings: The capacity of the short term memory is on average 7±2 items Methods: Various experiments involving asking participants to look at information and then recall it shortly after. Results: Participants would remember between 5 and 9 items on average, but this number would increase sometimes significantly if the participant used the 'chunking' technique of memorisation. Explanation: Why our brains are on average only capable of holding seven items is not a question that has been thoroughly answered (yet) - at the moment, we know that it simply is the case. CAPACITY of STM George Miller (1956) The Magic Number Seven How much information can we hold in short term memory? How could you remember: BB-CA-BC-IT-VC-DR-OM-EM-AS-ONY BBC- ABC- ITV- CDROM- EMA- SONY Miller suggests it is between 5 and 9 items. (7 plus or minus 2) this is called CHUNKING. Capacity experiment 2. Digit-span Technique (Jacobs, 1887) Complete the digit-span experiment. (separate PPT) How many numbers could you remember? Forwards? Backwards? Further evidence of the limited capacity of the STM. Peterson and Peterson (1959) Findings: The average duration of information staying in the STM is 18 seconds Method: Participants were given trigrams - mixtures of 3 different letters e.g. AQP - and asked to recall them after varying amounts of time (0-18+ seconds). Results: Only 10% of participants could remember trigrams after 18 seconds Explanation: Without rehearsal, the STM can only hold information for around 18 seconds Extra With rehearsal, the duration of information that is held in the STM can be increased and according to the Peterson and Peterson model of memory it is through this rehearsal that information is transferred to the LTM from the STM This suggests that there is not LTM transfer unless there is rehearsal (this was proven to be incorrect by other models). Duration of STM Peterson & Peterson (1959) • Aim: To investigate the duration of short-term memory, and provide empirical evidence for the multi-store model. • Procedure: A lab experiment was conducted. Participants had to recall trigrams (three letters, eg. TGH). To prevent rehersal participants were asked to count backwards in threes from a specified number. This is known as the brown peterson technique. • Participants were asked to recall the trigram after intervals of either 3, 6, 9, 12, 15 or 18 seconds. • Findings: The longer the interval delay the less trigrams were recalled. Participants were able to recall 80% of trigrams after a 3 seconds delay. However, after 18 seconds less than 5% of trigrams were recalled correctly. • Conclusion: Short-term memory has a limited duration when rehearsal is prevented. It is thought that this information is lost from short-term memory from trace decay. The results of the study also show the shortterm memory is different from long-term memory in terms of duration. Thus supporting the multi-store model of memory. • Criticisms: This experiment has low ecological validity as people do not try to recall trigrams in real life. Student Exercise Peterson & Peterson (1959) Counting backwards prevents rehearsal Instructions:- Read the consonants that appear below then count backwards in three’s from the number given. Write down the letters you recall when asked. L Z M , P V Q, X F D 763 STOP! WRITE NOW! B F Y , G Z J, P D L 435 STOP! WRITE NOW! K M R , H G Y, J T Z 917 STOP! WRITE NOW! M Q L , T L Y, F R N 329 STOP! WRITE NOW! Peterson & Peterson showed that the duration of S.T.M. is between 18 – 30 secs. Duration of STM • Peterson & Peterson (1959) • Limited • 18 – 30 seconds. What is a trigram • What is at Trigram, and why use it? • 1) The trigram has little or no meaning, unlike asking a person to remember a word which they may associate with something and be able to remember better. • 2) There are no vowels in the trigram, preventing any easy pronunciation of the trigram as a word, which makes it more difficult to remember on any other basis than as a trigram. • 3) Unlike words, the trigrams are equal in length, making the experiment less biased in terms of the information it requires participants to remember. Coding: Baddeley 1966 Aim: Investigate coding in STM and LTM. CONCLUSIONS: STM uses an ACOUSTIC code and LTM uses a SEMANTIC code. STM and LTM code information differently which suggests they are different stores. Alan Baddeley (1966) Findings: LTM stores information semantically and STM stores information acoustically. Method: Three independent groups were asked to memorise a list of words: one group had semantically similar words, the other acoustically similar words and the third was a control group with unrelated words. Results: Immediately after recalling words, it was the acoustically similar ones that suffered most and semantically similar ones that were remembered best When asked to recall the words after 20 minutes, it was semantically similar words that were remembered worst. Explanation: Although seemingly counter-intuitive, the results show that the STM uses an acoustic code because more erros were made when recalling acoustic words - this is because the memories clash with each other and make it difficult to recall the correct words. The same logic is applied to the LTM and semantically similar words leading us to believe that the LTM functions using a semantic code. Joke The psychologists tried to figure out how the LTM and STM stored information - it went Baddeley. Coding in LTM Baddeley (1966) mostly ‘Semantic’ Frost (1972) Visual as well? Nelson & Rothbart (1972) Acoustic? Capacity in LTM Unlimited. Wagenaar (1986) diary study of 2,400 events over 6 years. Tested himself on recall of events – excellent recall. Duration in LTM Lifetime. Bahrick (1975) showed 400 ppts aged between 17 – 74 photos from school-days. Those who had left 48 years previously could remember 80% names. Clinical studies of amnesiacs Case Study: HM (1957) Epileptic patient who underwent surgery to stop seizures. Left with ANTEROGRADE amnesia. STM was normal but was unable to keep new information in his LTM. They have removed his ability to make long term memories. STM and LTM are separate stores! Henry Gustav Molaison. HM lost approximately two-thirds of his hippocampus, parahippocampal gyrus, and amygdala. Clinical studies: Clive Wearing • A musician who contracted a rare form of encephalitis, leaving him with severe anterograde amnesia the inability to form new memories. • Welcome Trust have an exhibition about him. http://www.wellcomecollection.org/whats-on/exhibitions/identity/video-manwithout-memory.aspx His biography is called ‘Forever Today’ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wDNDRDJy-vo Korsakov Syndrome Alcohol abuse may cause loss of short term memories and the ability to transfer information from STM to LTM. Case study evidence for STM & LTM Both HM and Clive Wearing support the idea that STM and LTM are different stores. HOWEVER – LTM seems more complicated than one simple store – different types of LTM. What is wrong with using CASE STUDIES as evidence? Evaluate the MSM Multi-store Model of Memory Evaluation • Evidence – Jacobs, Peterson & Peterson, Sperling, Glanzer & Cunitz – Brain Damaged Patients • HM & Clive Wearing - Support theory different stores • However - Also suggest different types of LTM • Too simplistic – Not just 1 STM store (compare with working memory model) • Case study KF – Not just 1 LTM store • Brain damaged patients. Research of Tulving – Not just rehearsal required for transfer of information to LTM • Flashbulb memories • Compare to levels of processing model. • Influential – Sparked research based on information processing – Led to the development of further models Task: Multi – Store Model of Memory • In threes – read your information on your part of the model • You must be able to teach your part to the other two members in your team. Sensory Memory (SM) • Memory is held in the same sense that it is registered • In other words: A taste is held as a taste, a visual image is held as a picture (coding) • The capacity (how ‘big’ the memory store is) is large • The duration (how long the memory trace lasts) is brief…memory fades from this store very quickly • The processing in this store is unconscious, so has to be deduced by experiments Short Term Memory (STM) • Holds information coming from a Sensory Memory; Visually and Acoustically. (Coding) • The capacity of STM is bout five to seven items • The capacity can be improved by CHUNKING information together • If information in STM is rehearsed, it can be transferred into LTM if not 30 seconds (Duration) Long Term Memory (LTM) • This kind of memory lasts from minutes to up to a lifetime. (Duration) • Unlimited Capacity • Can store memory in a number of forms (Coding) • Code is largely abstract or semantic • It is likely that meaningful information is stored here..eg. Best friends name What are the main features of the Multi-Store Model of Memory? Type of Memory Sensory Memory STM LTM Capacity Duration Coding Fill Me in! Type of Memory Capacity Sensory Memory Potentially large but Fractions of a decays quickly second (Sperling, 1960) Sperling (1960) All senses (Iconic and Echoic) Crowder (1993) STM 7 (+ or – 2) (Miller, 1956) (Jacobs, 1887) 18 - 30seconds (Peterson & Peterson, 1959) Mostly Acoustic (Baddeley, 1966) LTM Unlimited Lifetime Bahrick (1975) Mostly Semantic (Baddeley, 1966) Wagenaar (1986) Duration Coding Evaluation (strengths) • MSM first cognitive explanation of memory which was highly influential, leading to a greater understanding of how memory works. • Evidence for the existence of separate memory stores of the SR, STM, LTM. • Supported by amnesia cases. Patients either lose their LTM or their STM abilities. • The serial position effect Murdock (1962), supports the MSM’s idea of there being separate STM and LTM. Evaluation (weaknesses) • MSM is that it is over-simplified • Cohen (1990) believes memory capacity cannot be measured purely in terms of amount of information, but rather by the nature of the information to be recalled. • MSM describes memory in terms of structure, namely the three memory stores and the processes of attention and verbal rehearsal. Ao1 Question types Mark Scheme AO1 = 3 • A Sensory memory • B Long-term memory • C Rehearsal loop 1 mark for each correct answer. Ao1 Question types 1. Describe one way in which psychologists have investigated the duration of short-term memory. In your answer, you should include details of stimulus materials used, what participants were asked to do and how duration was measured. (4 marks) Mark Scheme • AO1 = 4 • It is likely that candidates will refer to the experiment by Peterson and Peterson (1959). They presented participants with a consonant trigram. Although Peterson and Peterson is the most likely study, answers need not refer to an identifiable study to receive credit. Rehearsal was prevented by asking them to count backwards in threes from a specified number. After intervals of 3, 6, 9, 12, 15 or 18 seconds participants were asked to stop counting and to repeat the trigram. The % of trigrams correctly recalled was recorded for each time interval. Duration has also been investigated in a similar way using single words or sets of words. Research relating to word length effect in the phonological loop would be credit-worthy. Any acceptable way of investigating duration of STM should be credited. 1 mark for a brief answer, eg reference to trigrams in a duration study. 3 further marks for elaboration. For full marks all three elements should be covered. Ao2 Type of questions The multi-store model of memory proposes that there are separate short-term and long-term stores. Explain two differences between short-term memory and long-term memory in this mode Difference 1........................................................................................................... ................................................................................................................................. ................................................................................................................................. ................................................................................................................................. Extra space............................................................................................................. ................................................................................................................................. (2) Difference 2........................................................................................................... ................................................................................................................................. ................................................................................................................................. ................................................................................................................................. Extra space............................................................................................................. ................................................................................................................................. (2) Mark Scheme Candidates are likely to identify capacity, duration and encoding as ways in which STM and LTM differ. Processes are acceptable eg putting information into the stores or keeping information in the stores. Any legitimate difference(s) in multi-store model should be credited. For each difference: • 1 mark for identifying the difference eg STM holds less than LTM or LTM lasts longer than STM. • 2nd mark for accurate elaboration eg the capacity of STM is limited to 7 + / - 2 items whereas the capacity of LTM is unlimited or the duration of STM is up to 30 seconds whereas the duration of LTM is a lifetime. • 0 marks for simply naming eg capacity, duration, encoding of STM or LTM but no difference. A01 & A03 type of questions Describe and evaluate the multi-store model of memory. Refer to evidence in your answer. (10 marks) Mark Scheme AO3 • Marks for analysis which might include discussion of the issue of rehearsal as a requirement for transfer of information to LTM; criticisms of aspects of the model by comparison with other models, such as arguments that the STS and LTS are not unitary stores; explanation of primacy and recency effects in serial position studies; coding confusion in STM; discussion of the nature of deficits in case studies of neurological damage. Credit evaluation of the methodology of studies only when made relevant to the discussion of the model. Credit use of evidence. Likely studies include: Murdock (1962) Glanzer and Cunitz (1966), Peterson and Peterson (1959), Craik and Watkins (1973), Conrad (1963 / 4), Baddeley (1966), Milner et al (1978), Blakemore (1988), Craik and Tulving (1975), Hyde and Jenkins (1973), and Working Memory studies such as Baddeley, Thomson and Buchanan (1975), Hoosain and Salili (1988). Home learning • Jamie wanted to contact his doctor. He looked up the number in his telephone directory. Before he dialled the number, he had a short conversation with his friend. Jamie was about to phone his doctor, but he had forgotten the number. -Use your knowledge of the multi-store model to explain why Jamie would not remember the doctor’s number. (4 marks) • Read up on the working model of memory • Revise, Revise, Revise