Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

THE MODAL MODEL Atkinson and Shiffrin (1968) rehearse Sensory

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "THE MODAL MODEL Atkinson and Shiffrin (1968) rehearse Sensory"— Presentation transcript:

1 THE MODAL MODEL Atkinson and Shiffrin (1968) rehearse Sensory
Information Store Short Term Memory (STM) Long Term Memory (LTM) recode retrieve

2 THE WORKING MEMORY MODEL Baddeley and Hitch, 1974
Central Executive Phonological Store Visuo-Spatial Store Articulatory processes Visuo-spatial processes PHONOLOGICAL LOOP VISUO-SPATIAL SKETCHPAD

3 Evidence for the Phonological Loop
Articulatory Suppression Word Length Effect Phonological Similarity Effect

4 Articulatory Suppression (Murray, 1967)
No secondary task Articulatory suppression Recall performance

5 Word Length Effect (Baddeley et al., 1975)
Recall performance Short Words ie., fit, cat, put Long Words ie., university, escalator ie., ticket, jogger ie., Friday, motion

6 Phonological Similarity Effect (Conrad & Hull, 1964)
Recall performance Phonologically distinct lists ie., TRQKO Phonologically similar lists ie., TVBCD

7 Summary of Evidence Articulatory Suppression Word Length Effect
- suggests the importance of rehearsal as the active process Word Length Effect suggests the importance of rehearsal for maintaining phonological information in STM Phonological Similarity Effect suggests that information held in the phonological store fades and becomes confused with other similar information

8 Interaction of these effects
Recall performance 1 task 2 tasks ? Short words Long words Word Length

9 Summary of Evidence Articulatory Suppression Word Length Effect
- suggests the importance of rehearsal as the active process Word Length Effect suggests the importance of rehearsal for maintaining phonological information in STM Phonological Similarity Effect suggests that information held in the phonological store fades and becomes confused with other similar information The interaction of these effects - suggests that rehearsal is the active processing system that serves the passive phonological store, and that together, these two components make up the PHONOLOGICAL LOOP.

10 So What? The Importance of the Phonological Loop
PATIENT ‘PV’: Acquisition of new vocabulary Acquisition of a second language Language comprehension


Download ppt "THE MODAL MODEL Atkinson and Shiffrin (1968) rehearse Sensory"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google