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The Working Memory Model

The Working Memory Model. Baddeley and Hitch (1974) The Working Memory Model. Replaces concept of a single STS Replaces concept of a passive STS Short term memory is a flexible and complex system. There is a central control system with a number of subsidiary systems. The Working Memory Model.

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The Working Memory Model

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  1. The Working Memory Model

  2. Baddeley and Hitch (1974)The Working Memory Model • Replaces concept of a single STS • Replaces concept of a passive STS • Short term memory is a flexible and complex system. • There is a central control system with a number of subsidiary systems

  3. The Working Memory Model Central Executive The Visuo-spatial scratch pad The inner eye Phonological loop The inner voice and the inner ear Episodic buffer Allows information from the subsidiary systems to be combined with information from LTM

  4. The Central Executive • Involved with decision making and problem solving • Controls attention • Involved with planning • Synthesizes (processes) information • Flexible - processes information from any modality. • Limited capacity so can attend to a limited number of things at once

  5. The Phonological Loop(The inner ear and the inner voice) • Stores limited number of speech-based sounds for brief periods • Two components: The phonological store (the inner ear) The articulatory control process (the inner voice)

  6. The Phonological Loop(The inner ear and the inner voice) The phonological store (inner ear) • Allows acoustically coded items to be stored for brief periods (some one talking, a melody etc.)

  7. The Phonological Loop(The inner voice and the inner ear) The articulatory control process (inner voice) • Allows (sub-) vocal repetitions of items in phonological store

  8. The visuo-spatial scratch pad(the inner eye) • Processes and stores mental images in terms of what they look like and their place in the visual field • Limited capacity • Independent from the phonological loop

  9. The Episodic Buffer • Binds together (integrates) information into chunks or episodes • Limited capacity • Binds together information from long term memory with that being processed in working memory • Binds long-term memories together to form novel episodes (elephants playing ice-hockey. You’ve never seen it, but you can create the vision by using the episodic buffer)

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