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Cognition 7e, Margaret MatlinChapter 4 . The Classic Research on Working Memory. George Miller's "Magical Number Seven"suggested that people can remember about seven items (give or take two)chunk as memory unitproposed that people engage in internal mental processes in order to convert stimuli
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1. Working Memory Chapter 4
2. Cognition 7e, Margaret Matlin Chapter 4 The Classic Research on Working Memory George Miller's "Magical Number Seven"
suggested that people can remember about seven items (give or take two)
chunk as memory unit
proposed that people engage in internal mental processes in order to convert stimuli into a manageable number of chunks
3. Cognition 7e, Margaret Matlin Chapter 4 The Classic Research on Working Memory Other Early Research on Short-Term-Memory Capacity
The Brown/Peterson & Peterson Technique
material held in memory for less than a minute is frequently forgotten
remember three items; count backwards by threes
rehearsal
4. Cognition 7e, Margaret Matlin Chapter 4 Brown/Peterson & Peterson—Typical Results
5. Cognition 7e, Margaret Matlin Chapter 4 The Classic Research on Working Memory Other Early Research on Short-Term-Memory Capacity
The Recency Effect
serial position effect
recency effect
primacy effect
used to measure the size of short-term memory
6. Cognition 7e, Margaret Matlin Chapter 4 Serial Position Effect
7. Cognition 7e, Margaret Matlin Chapter 4 The Classic Research on Working Memory Atkinson and Shiffrin's Model
control processes
Other Factors Affecting Working Memory's Capacity
Pronunciation Time
short names vs. long names
numbers in different languages
acoustic properties of stimuli
8. Cognition 7e, Margaret Matlin Chapter 4 Pronunciation Rate & Memory Span
9. Cognition 7e, Margaret Matlin Chapter 4 The Classic Research on Working Memory Other Factors Affecting Working Memory's Capacity (continued)
Semantic Similarity of the Items in Working Memory
semantics
Wickens and colleagues (1976)
proactive interference (PI)
release from proactive interference
Brown/Peterson & Peterson task varying semantic similarity on Trial 4
10. Cognition 7e, Margaret Matlin Chapter 4 Release from Proactive Interference
11. Cognition 7e, Margaret Matlin Chapter 4 The Working-Memory Approach Alan Baddeley & Graham Hitch (1974); Baddeley (2000, 2001, 2006)
What does short-term memory accomplish for our cognitive processes?
12. Cognition 7e, Margaret Matlin Chapter 4 Baddeley’s Model of Working Memory
13. Cognition 7e, Margaret Matlin Chapter 4 The Working-Memory Approach working-memory approach—our immediate memory is a multipart system that temporarily holds and manipulates information as we perform cognitive tasks
central executive
visuospatial sketchpad
episodic buffer
phonological loop
emphasis on active manipulation of information in working memory
14. Cognition 7e, Margaret Matlin Chapter 4 The Working-Memory Approach Evidence for Components with Independent Capacities
Working memory is not unitary
Baddeley & Hitch (1974)
random numbers and spatial reasoning task
15. Cognition 7e, Margaret Matlin Chapter 4 The Working-Memory Approach In Depth: Phonological Loop
phonological loop—processes a limited number of sounds for a short period of time
subvocalization
16. Cognition 7e, Margaret Matlin Chapter 4 The Working-Memory Approach In Depth: Phonological Loop
Research on Acoustic Confusions
acoustic confusions
Conrad & Hull (1964)
list of letters, presented visually
lists of words
Jones and colleagues (2004)—rehearsal explanation rather than phonological loop
17. Cognition 7e, Margaret Matlin Chapter 4 The Working-Memory Approach In Depth: Phonological Loop
Other Uses for the Phonological Loop
counting
reading
acquiring new vocabulary
learning foreign language
mathematical calculations
problem-solving tasks
complex task instructions
18. Cognition 7e, Margaret Matlin Chapter 4 The Working-Memory Approach In Depth: Phonological Loop
Neuroscience Research on the Phonological Loop
frontal lobe
left temporal lobe
parietal lobe
19. Cognition 7e, Margaret Matlin Chapter 4 The Working-Memory Approach Visuospatial Sketchpad
visuospatial sketchpad—processes both visual and spatial information
store appearance and relative position
store visual information encoded from verbal stimuli
limited capacity
20. Cognition 7e, Margaret Matlin Chapter 4 The Working-Memory Approach Visuospatial Sketchpad
Research on the Visuospatial Sketchpad
performing two visuospatial tasks simultaneously
no standardized set of visual stimuli
tendency to provide names for visual stimuli, thus using phonological loop instead
Brandimonte and colleagues (1992)—say "la la la" while looking at complex visual stimulus
21. Cognition 7e, Margaret Matlin Chapter 4 The Working-Memory Approach Visuospatial Sketchpad
Other Uses for the Visuospatial Sketchpad
engineering
art
architecture
retaining image of a scene
finding your way from one location to another
videogames, jigsaw puzzles, mazes
television
22. Cognition 7e, Margaret Matlin Chapter 4 The Working-Memory Approach Visuospatial Sketchpad
Neuroscience Research on the Visuospatial Sketchpad
right hemisphere
occipital lobe
frontal cortex
frontal and parietal lobes
23. Cognition 7e, Margaret Matlin Chapter 4 The Working-Memory Approach Central Executive
central executive—integrates information from the phonological loop, the visuospatial sketchpad, the episodic buffer and from long-term memory
Characteristics of the Central Executive
plans and coordinates, but does not store information
executive supervisor
decides which issues deserve attention
selects a strategy
limited capacity to perform simultaneous tasks
24. Cognition 7e, Margaret Matlin Chapter 4 The Working-Memory Approach Central Executive
The Central Executive and Daydreaming
Teasdale and colleagues (1995)
random-number generation task
report thoughts
Neuroscience Research on the Central Executive
frontal lobe
25. Cognition 7e, Margaret Matlin Chapter 4 The Working-Memory Approach Episodic Buffer
episodic buffer—temporary storehouse where we can gather and combine information from the phonological loop, the visuospatial sketchpad, and long-term memory
integrates information from different modalities
limited
temporary
26. Cognition 7e, Margaret Matlin Chapter 4 The Working-Memory Approach Individual Differences: Major Depression and Working Memory
Working memory performance is related to:
overall intelligence and grades in school
verbal fluency, reading comprehension, reasoning ability, note-taking skills
reading ability
Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder
27. Cognition 7e, Margaret Matlin Chapter 4 The Working-Memory Approach Individual Differences: Major Depression and Working Memory
Major depression
Christopher and MacDonald (2005)
phonological loop
visuospatial sketchpad
central executive
difficulty concentrating
unwanted negative thoughts