The Working Memory Model Describe the main components in the working memory model.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
 ALAN BADDELEY AND GRAHAM HITCH (1974)  Suggests that memory is an active, multi-component memory system.  Subsystems of working memory with temporarily.
Advertisements

Learning Objectives To review key research for the working memory model To review knowledge and understanding of models of memory To apply knowledge to.
Instructions Individually, choose a component of working memory. Write a short paragraph describing the main features of this working memory component.
Working Memory Model Baddeley and Hitch (1974) developed an alternative model of short-term memorywhich they called working memory.
Working Memory Dr. Claudia J. Stanny EXP 4507 Memory & Cognition Spring 2009.
Cognition, 8e by Margaret W. MatlinChapter 4 Cognition, 8e Chapter 4 Working Memory.
 What is Short-Term Memory?  How can you fit more information into STM?  Is STM different from LTM?  How does STM compare to Working Memory?
Short-Term Memory & Working Memory
The Architecture of Human Memory
Short-Term and Working Memory
What is Short-Term Memory?. STM Task vs. ST Processing An Important Distinction!! Each memory model will have its own account of processing for STM Tasks.
Working Memory: The Feature Model Presented by: Umer Fareed.
Evidence for Multi-store model: 1.Primacy-Recency Effect - Atkinson (1970). When presented with lists to remember we recall first and last items best.
Memory III Working Memory & Brain. Atkinson & Shiffrin (1968) Model of Memory.
False Memories (Beth Loftus) Lost Mariner (Oliver Sacks)
The Working Memory Model
Evaluate two models or theories of one cognitive process with reference to research studies.
Models of memory.
The Working Memory Model. Baddeley & Hitch 1974  They felt that STM is not just one store but a number of different stores. Why?  1 store for visual.
Working Memory And Case Studies. Working Memory Model.
THE WORKING MEMORY MODEL Baddeley and Hitch, 1974 Central Executive Phonological Store Visuo-Spatial Store Articulatory processesVisuo-spatial processes.
Working Memory Components Evidence Different codes Dual-task paradigm Dissociations.
THE “WORKING MEMORY” APPROACH Baddeley & Hitch (1974) –Use articulatory suppression to interfere with some tasks, not others B doesn’t precede AB A –Develop.
Information Processing. History In response to Behaviorism, a cognitive model of mind as computer was adopted (1960’s, 70’s) Humans process, store, encode,
The Working Memory Model
Working Memory Model Baddeley and Hitch (1974)
Working Memory Baddeley and Hitch (1974)‏. Working Memory Baddeley and Hitch (1974)‏ –Believed that the STM store in the Multistore Model was too simplistic.
The Working Model of Memory
“e.g.” vs. “i.e.” When you mean “for example,” use e.g. It is an abbreviation for the Latin phrase exempli gratia. When you mean “that is,” use “i.e.”
Multi Store Model Calvin Laverick. Why have a model? A model is useful so we can test and investigate how memory works. – Without one, this would be very.
The Working Memory Model Can I outline the working memory model of STM? Glossary: Central executive Phonological loop Visuo-spatial sketchpad Phonological.
Evidence for a Visuospatial Sketch Pad (VSP) Psychology 355: Cognitive Psychology Instructor: John Miyamoto 4/28 /2015: Lecture 05-2 This Powerpoint presentation.
The Working Memory Model was first proposed by Baddeley and Hitch in They Carried out an investigation to investigate whether there are different.
Planning an essay This powerpoint is now on the website under WMM in Paper 1.
The Working Memory Model
Session 6: Models of Memory. Evaluate two models or theories of one cognitive process with reference to relevant research studies What the command term.
Short Term Memory William James (1900): Made Primary-Secondary memory distinction. Important distinction: Primary was limited capacity and duration. Secondary.
Evaluate two models or theories of one cognitive process with reference to research studies. We will be focusing on two models of memory.
The Working Memory Model LO: To describe the main components in the working memory model.
The Working Model of Memory L.O. Outline the WMM. L.O. Explain key studies. L.O. Evaluate its usefulness.
Duration is the amount of time a memory lasts in out short term memory. The duration of Short Term Memory lasts up to about seconds and occasionally.
Evidence and Evaluation of WMM. Capacity of the ARTICULATORY LOOP Baddeley et al (1975) showed that people involved in a recall task could immediately.
Psychology Models of Memory. Outline the multi-store model The multi-store model, developed by Atkinson and Shiffrin (1968), is an information processing.
Cognitive Psychology The working Model of Memory By Baddeley and Hitch (1974)
Exam Questions & Mark Schemes
The working memory model essay: top 3 mistakes which did you make? 1.Not saying what the studies show just what they found 2.Getting the details of the.
Try to remember as many nonsense syllables from the next slide as possible.
Topic 2 – Cognitive Psychology Lesson four – Working memory model 1.
Chapter 5 Short-Term and Working Memory. Some Questions to Consider Why can we remember a telephone number long enough to place a call, but then we forget.
Draw the WMM. Include as much detail as you can..
The Working Memory Model Baddeley & Hitch, The Working Memory Model The Diagram:
Working memory model A3 sheet – draw out a diagram for the model on one side and space to evaluate on the other side. Add a description of each element.
Working Memory Model Baddeley and Hitch (1974) developed an alternative model of short-term memory which they called working memory.
The Working Memory Model cogmed
WMM.
Work this out in your heads in silence...
Memory Models of Memory.
Baddely and Hitch (1974) theorised that STM must be made up of several components all of which are involved in processes other than simple storage.
PSYA1: Cognitive Psychology Memory
Evaluation of WMM.
Memory.
Evaluating of the working memory model
Working Memory Model Baddeley and Hitch (1974)
Case Studies and other supporting evidence
Evidence for the Working Memory Model.
To Do: Multistore model explained
P: there is real-life application for understanding different types of LTM. E: being able to identify different aspects of LTM allows psychologists to.
The Working Memory Model
Working Memory 1974.
Presentation transcript:

The Working Memory Model Describe the main components in the working memory model.

Work this out in your heads in silence = = What process do you use to work these out? 76 78

Baddeley & Hitch (1974) Believed memory is not just one store but a number of different stores: – 2 visual tasks = poorer performance but 1 visual and 1 verbal means no interruption Focused on STM ONLY and believed it was not a unitary store LTM as a more passive store that holds previously learned material for use by the STM when needed.

Model We will now look at the working memory model…whilst exercising your memories! – In groups of 4 – A3 paper each – Each take turn at looking at the model for 30 seconds then report back to group. Group must try and draw model from reports – reporter CANNOT draw!

The Working Memory Model (Baddeley & Hitch, 1974)

Central executive Key component in model Functions: – Direct attention to tasks – Determine how resources (slave systems) are allocated. Limited Capacity

Phonological Loop Limited Capacity Deals with auditory information and preserves word order Baddeley (1986) further subdivided it into – Phonological store ( holds words heard) – Articulatory process ( holds words heard/seen and silently repeated ( looped) like an inner voice.

Visuo-spatial sketch pad Visual and/or spatial information stored here – Visual = what things look like – Spatial = relationships between things Limited capacity Logie (1995) suggested subdivision: – Visuo-cache (store) – Inner scribe for spatial relations.

Episodic Buffer Baddeley ( 2000) added episodic buffer as he realised model needed a more general store. Slave systems deal with specific types of information. Central executive has no storage capacity Buffer extra storage system but with limited capacity. Integrates information from all other areas.

Sum it up... We’ve seen the model now let’s talk about the model..... – Write ONE question about the working memory model (that you know the answer to). – You will go and test the class and see how well they have understood/remembered the model.

Evidence for the Working Memory Model.

To test the idea of more than one component, Baddeley and Hitch devised the dual task technique. Let’s see what happened…..

Your turn! You will now complete a dual task technique ( one that was used by Baddeley and Hitch). Repeat the numbers below aloud whilst ticking the true/false answers

1: B is followed by A BATrue/False 2: A is preceded by BABTrue/False 3: A is not followed by BBATrue/False 4: B follows AABTrue/False 5: B does not follow ABATrue/False 6: B is not followed by AABTrue/False 7: A follows BABTrue/False 8: B is not preceded by AABTrue/False 9: A is not followed by BBATrue/False 10: B does not precede AABTrue/False

Their research (Baddeley & Hitch)….. Asked participants to perform a reasoning task whilst simultaneously reciting aloud a list of 6 digits. If digit span is really a measure of STM capacity, participants would be expected to show impaired performance on the reasoning task because their STM would be fully occupied. However, found Participants made few errors on either, though the speed was slightly slower.

Summarise 1) What did they do in the experiment (HINT: it’s what you did!!) 2) How does this support evidence for the working memory model?

Evidence for the central executive Baddeley (1996) investigated selective attention and switching retrieval plans. Asked participants to generate random strings of digits on a keyboard (this is quite hard as you have to pay close attention in order to avoid some kind of pattern emerging). This was carried out alone or alongside another task such as reciting the alphabet, counting from one or alternating between letters and numbers (A1, B2, C3). The generated digit string became increasingly less random in Condition 3 where participants had to switch 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.

More evidence for CE Individuals had to perform two tasks simultaneously (dual task) rather than one after the other (single task). Bunge et al (2000) used fMRI to see which parts of the brain were most active when participants were doing two tasks (reading a sentence and recalling the final word in each sentence). The same brain areas (pre-frontal cortex) were active in either dual or single task conditions but there was significantly more activation in dual task condition

Evidence for the phonological loop and articulatory process Remember the following:

Harm

Twice

Calm

Share

Tree

Book

Sun

Four

Key

Short

Recall them! How many did you get right? Harm Twice Calm Share Tree Book Sun Four Key Short

And again..recall these:

Association

Representative

Discouragement

Meaningfulness

Suppression

Enhancing

Component

Performances

Forgetting

Damaging

Recall them! How many did you get right? Association Representative Discouragement Meaningfulness Suppression Enhancing Component Performances Forgetting Damaging The phonological loop explains why the word- length effect occurs – the fact that people cope better with short words than long words in working memory (STM).

Word- length effect It seems that the phonological loop holds the amount of information that you can say in seconds (Baddeley et al, 1975). This makes it hard to remember a list of long words such as ‘association’ and ‘representative’ compared to shorter words like ‘harm’ and ‘twice’ and therefore inhibits rehearsal of longer words!

BUT…articulatory process Word length effect disappears if a person is given an articulatory suppression task (‘the, the, the’ while reading the words). The repetitive task ties up the articulatory process and means you can’t rehearse the shorter words more quickly than the longer ones, so the word length effect disappears. This provided evidence for……

Evidence for the visuo-spatial sketchpad Baddeley et al (1975) demonstrated the existence of the visuo-spatial sketchpad. Participants were given a visual tracing task (they had to track a moving light with a pointer). At the same time they were given one of two other tasks; task 1 was to describe all the angles on the letter F, task 2 was to perform a verbal task. Task 1 was very difficult, but not task 2, presumably because the second task involved two different components (or slave systems). This is also evidence related to the effects of doing two tasks using the same or different components. This was a highly controlled laboratory experiment using a repeated measures design to eliminate individual differences. However, the task was rather artificial.

Also…. Logie (1995) Visual cache stores information about visual form and colour and the inner scribe processes spatial and movement information. Klauer and Zhao (2004) supported this idea by asking participants to carry out one of two primary tasks, either a visual task or a spatial task. At the same time as doing this task they were asked to do either a spatial interference task, a visual interference task or no secondary task (control condition). They found that performance of the spatial task was much poorer for people who were simultaneously carrying out the spatial distracter task than for people who were doing the visual distracter task and vice versa. Studies using positron emission tomography (PET) scans have also provided evidence for separate spatial and visual systems. There appears to be more activity in the left half of the brain of people carrying out visual working memory tasks but more in the right half of the brain during spatial task.

Evidence for the episodic buffer Baddeley et al (1987) – PPTs were shown words and then immediate recall – Recall was much better for sentences (related words) than unrelated Supports idea of ‘general’ memory store that draws on LTM (semantics)

Evidence from brain damaged patients Case of KF (Shallice and Warrington, 1970) showed that STM works independently of LTM STM forgetting of auditory information was much greater than that of visual stimuli. Thus his brain damage seemed to be restricted to the phonological loop. – Letters – Meaningful sounds…ring ring

Also…. SC - generally good learning abilities with the exception of being unable to learn word pairs that were presented out loud. This suggests damage to the phonological loop (Trojano and Grossi, 1995) LH - had been involved in a road accident. Performed better on spatial tasks than those involving visual imagery (Farah et al, 1988). This suggests separate visual and spatial systems.

Homework.. Fill in the necessary words of your glossary lists with the information you have learned on the working memory model!

Sum it up... We’ve seen the model now lets talk about the model..... – Write ONE question about the working memory model (that you know the answer too). – You will go and test the class and see how well they have understood/remembered the model.