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AP PSYCH 5.1 Introduction to Memory

System of Memory

  • Memory is learning that persists over time

  • Information and/or experiences are encoded, stored, then retrieved

Structure

  • AP Psychology references the multistore model of memory

    • This proposed that information moves through multiple storage centers

  • This is based off of Atkinson and Shiffrin’s Information-Processing Model

    • Similar to sequential computer processing

  • Also called the three state or three box model

    • Memory goes through three centers: sensory, short-term (STM), long-term (LTM)

  • There have been some revisions over time

    • Baddeley revised STM to distinguish it from working memory

      • Meaning we are actively processing information

    • STM is like a temporary shelf, working memory is the workspace on the desk

    • Technically the same stage/box but two different functions can occur

Information-Processing Model

  • Stimulus is detected and is immediately taken into our sensory register/memory

    • Iconic, or visual, memory can be recalled for less than a second

    • Echoic, or auditory, memory can be recalled for 1-3 seconds

    • Very low retention but high capacity

    • Essentially what you are actively processing

  • The stimulus then enters our awareness, moving into working and short term memory

    • Short term memories can be recalled for 20-30 seconds

    • This stage can hold 7-9 items on average

    • We can do maintenance or rote rehearsal to make items last longer in this stage

      • They are not moving into long term memory, but are rather giving the item another 20-30 seconds

  • The information is encoded and stored in long term memory

    • This technically has no time or number limitations

    • That does not mean that everything encoded stays or is preserved perfectly

    • When taking something out of long-term memory (remembering,) we ‘retrieve’ it, and momentarily bring it back to working memory

Q

AP PSYCH 5.1 Introduction to Memory

System of Memory

  • Memory is learning that persists over time

  • Information and/or experiences are encoded, stored, then retrieved

Structure

  • AP Psychology references the multistore model of memory

    • This proposed that information moves through multiple storage centers

  • This is based off of Atkinson and Shiffrin’s Information-Processing Model

    • Similar to sequential computer processing

  • Also called the three state or three box model

    • Memory goes through three centers: sensory, short-term (STM), long-term (LTM)

  • There have been some revisions over time

    • Baddeley revised STM to distinguish it from working memory

      • Meaning we are actively processing information

    • STM is like a temporary shelf, working memory is the workspace on the desk

    • Technically the same stage/box but two different functions can occur

Information-Processing Model

  • Stimulus is detected and is immediately taken into our sensory register/memory

    • Iconic, or visual, memory can be recalled for less than a second

    • Echoic, or auditory, memory can be recalled for 1-3 seconds

    • Very low retention but high capacity

    • Essentially what you are actively processing

  • The stimulus then enters our awareness, moving into working and short term memory

    • Short term memories can be recalled for 20-30 seconds

    • This stage can hold 7-9 items on average

    • We can do maintenance or rote rehearsal to make items last longer in this stage

      • They are not moving into long term memory, but are rather giving the item another 20-30 seconds

  • The information is encoded and stored in long term memory

    • This technically has no time or number limitations

    • That does not mean that everything encoded stays or is preserved perfectly

    • When taking something out of long-term memory (remembering,) we ‘retrieve’ it, and momentarily bring it back to working memory