Transcript history
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?
Lasts about 18 seconds without rehearsal
(Peterson & Peterson,1959): count backwards by
threes and then remember a set of letters
Capacity is 7 +/- 2 chunks
The amount of information in a chunk can vary
543149290210 (12 chunks)
543 1492 90210 (3 chunks)
You can use mnemonics to make very large
chunks
Primacy Effect – LTM
Recency Effect – STM
Double-dissociation:
H.M.: loss of LTM with intact STM
K.F.: loss of STM with intact LTM
Letters that sound similar (b and v) are more
likely to be confused than letters that look similar
(q and p) (Conrad, 1963)
Bilingual Welsh-English speakers can remember
more digits in English than in Welsh - the names
for numbers are longer in Welsh (Baddeley, 1982)
Two letters are presented with a brief delay
between them. Time to say whether the letters
are the same is less when they match visually
(Posner & Keele, 1967)
Faster to match A-A or a-a than A-a
Different view of STM
Emphasizes processing ability
Need to coordinate storage and processing
“Mary and John got into a fight and she refused to
speak to him”
Central
Executive
Phonological
Loop
- makes decisions
- coordinates
rehearsal
Visual
- Spatial
Scratchpad
Phonological loop
Phonological similarity effect (Conrad,1964)
Word length effect (Baddeley et al.,1984)
Articulatory suppression (Baddeley et al.,1984)
Visual-Spatial Scratchpad
Pointing to a yes-no response interferes with
performance on a visual task but not on a verbal task
(Brooks, 1968)
Neurons in primary visual cortex active in monkeys
during delayed-response task (Super et al., 2001)
What is the adaptive value of working memory?