Wednesday, 10 December 2014

The cognitive interview & strategies for memory improvement

Today we finished the memory topic with a look at the cognitive interview (ppt here) and strategies to improve memory (students completed mind maps on these- the material is on P.38 of your textbook.

Important announcements:

ESSAY - Due Wednesday 7th January. 'Outline and evaluate research into the effects of age of witness on accuracy of eyewitness testimony (6+6)'

MOCK EXAM - Friday 16th January. You will have a paper on memory and research methods, plus a paper on stress. 


M

Wednesday, 26 November 2014

Eyewitness testimony



Today we looked at a practical application of memory - whether or not our memories can be relied on or not - and the implications of this in court. Leading questions are one factor that can seriously alter people's memory for events, and we looked at Loftus & Palmer (1974) in detail. You need to know their aims, procedures, findings and conclusions and also some evaluation. The ppt is here.

We also looked at other factors that influence eyewitness testimony, namely schemas, age, anxiety and the reality or not of the situation. The ppt for this section is here. The sheet that you filled in on age & EWT is here.

We will have a progress test in two weeks time on EWT so your homework is to revise. Your other homework is to fill in page 11 of the RM booklets.

Wednesday, 12 November 2014

The working memory model continued....

Today we carried on with the working memory model -it's such an important topic I wanted to spend a bit more time on it.



Today's ppt is here. The three activities from today were all paper based, so if you were missing see me next lesson for copies.

We also reflected on feedback from the capacity, duration & encoding essays and thought about how to improve our next one. This is: 'Outline and evaluate the working memory model' (12 marks) - due Wednesday 26th November. Remember it should comprise 50% knowledge (AO1) and 50% evaluation (AO2).

Next lesson we'll cover eyewitness testimony plus the cognitive interview.


Sunday, 26 October 2014

The Working Memory Model

Apologies for the late post.

On Wednesday we studied the Working Memory Model. This is a model of short-term memory only. We discussed the Central Executive, the Phonological Loop and the Visuo-Spatial sketchpad, and looked at research evidence that supports the different components.



Wednesday's powerpoint is here.

Your homework over half-term is to complete the mini-projects that we started in class today. The title is 'Does articulatory suppression eliminate the word-length effect?'. Write-ups are to be done individually, and must follow a standard layout - the sheet that explains how to do this is here.

We will also have a short progress test in our next lesson (Wed 12th Nov) on the MSM and WMM.


Wednesday, 8 October 2014

The multi-store model of memory




Today we put all our previous knowledge about capacity, duration and encoding together in the multi-store model of memory. We discussed sensory memory, and then the advantages (easy to study/intuitive/commonsense/accounts for some research findings) and disadvantages (reductionist/doesn't account for different types of info) of the model. Supporting evidence for the MSM comes from Glanzer & Cunitz (the serial position curve), brain imaging research and evidence from brain-injured patients, eg HM and Clive Wearing.

Today's powerpoint is here.

I also set an essay, this is due in on WEDNESDAY 22ND OCTOBER.

The title is 'Give a brief account of the differences between STM and LTM, and consider the extent to which research supports the distinction between them' (12 marks). A suggested essay plan is here

Wednesday, 24 September 2014

Capacity, duration and encoding



Today we covered what felt like a huge amount of content; well done for a busy lesson. I'll list all the resources below:


I gave out research methods booklets, here is an electronic version, please bring these every lesson. The plan is to start every lesson with 15 minutes RM.

I also handed out a schedule for the whole term. Here is a copy.


We covered duration in LTM; we discussed children's TV programmes and the difference between recall and recognition. We looked at Bahrick's study, which found good evidence for the duration of long-term memories. Recognition (cue provided) was better than recall. Here is the duration in LTM powerpoint.

We then looked at capacity in STM. We measure our average digit span to be around 7.2 items. Miller defined STM capacity as being 7 plus or minus 2, and looked at the idea of chunking. We discussed postcodes and telephone numbers as real life applications of chunking. Remember that chunking isn't wholly foolproof; the size of the chunk does matter (Simon, 1974). Here is the capacity powerpoint.

Finally we discussed encoding in STM and LTM. We replicated the Baddeley (1966) study. For STM, participants did worse in the acoustic similarity category. Baddeley concluded that this meant that the brain codes acoustically in STM. This is a crucial point! If you don't follow, please ask next lesson. For LTM, people performed worse in the semantic similarity category, showing that this is how the brain codes in long-term memory. Here is the encoding powerpoint.


It's vital that you go over the powerpoints and all the information covered today. This will be easier when you have textbooks but is still possible now. 

Wednesday, 10 September 2014

The man who keeps falling in love with his wife


Today we introduced our first unit 1 module - memory. We discussed the case of  Clive Wearing and the implications of this for how important memory is. Here is an interesting summary of Clive's memory history. Interestingly, his musical memory appears intact and this article explores why this might be.

Here is today's powerpoint containing the notes on Peterson & Peterson (1965).

Mrs Watson