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Lecture 5 Psyco 350, A1 Fall, 2006

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attentional management (ability to focus on relevant info & inhibit irrelevant info. ... Answer each math question and recall final word. Psyco 350 Lec #5 Slide 29 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Lecture 5 Psyco 350, A1 Fall, 2006


1
Lecture 5 Psyco 350, A1Fall, 2006
  • N. R. Brown

2
Outline
  • Baddeleys Model of Working Memory
  • Phonological Loop
  • Visuo-spatial sketchpad
  • Central Executive
  • Problems w/ WM
  • An Alternative Cowans Embedded Process Model

3
VSSP
  • Function
  • construction, maintained, manipulation of
    mental images. Radvansky, p. 97
  • Assumptions
  • Independence of VSSP Phonological Loop

4
Visuo-spatial sketchpad
  • Operations
  • Mental rotation
  • Mental scanning
  • Boundary extension
  • Dynamic memory
  • Supports
  • Spatial problem-solving (moving a couch
  • Prediction of dynamic consequences.

5
Independence of VSSP Phonological LoopBrooks
(1968)
  • Dual Task Experiment
  • Goal to demonstrate
  • spatial response mode interference w/ spatial
    processing
  • verbal response mode interferes w/ verbal
    processing
  • cross-modal tasks produce little interference

6
Independence of VSSP Phonological LoopBrooks
(1968)
  • Design (2X3)
  • TASK X RESPONSE MODE
  • image scanning pointing
  • grammatical decision tapping

  • vocal

7
Brooks (1968) Image Scanning Task
  • Given a block letter starting point
  • If current corner is top or bottom ?yes
  • Otherwise ?no

8
F
9
Brooks (1968) Image Scanning Task
  • Answers to block F
  • yes
  • yes
  • yes
  • no
  • no
  • no
  • no
  • no
  • no
  • yes

10
Brooks (1968) Image Scanning Task
  • Given a proverb/cliché
  • If current word is noun ?yes
  • Otherwise ?no
  • Example
  • A bird in the hand is not in the bush.

11
Brooks (1968) Grammatical Judgment Task
  • Given a proverb/cliché
  • If current word is noun ?yes
  • Otherwise ?no
  • Example
  • A bird in the hand is not in the bush.
  • n y n n y n n n n y

12
Brooks (1968) Response Modes
  • While performing target task
  • Vocal say yes/no
  • Taping left tap yes right tap no
  • Pointing point to successive y/n pairs on
    response sheet

13
Brooks (1968) Pointing
14
Brooks (1968) Results

gtgt
ltlt
  • Spatial response mode
  • interfered w/ spatial task
  • did not interfere w/ verbal task
  • Verbal response mode
  • interfered w/ verbal task
  • did not interfere w/ spatial task

15
Brooks (1968) Interperation
  • Task X Mode interaction indicates
  • separate limited pool of resources for verbal
    spatial task
  • image scanning task spatial response mode draw
    on the limited resources of the VSSP.
  • grammatical decision task vocal response mode
    both draw on the resources of the phonological
    loop.

16
Mental Rotation VSSP _at_ Work
  • Shepard Metzler (1971)
  • Materials Pairs of 3-d(ish) objects in a
    varierty of orientations.
  • Task timed same/different judgment

17
  • SAME 80? disparity in the picture plane

18
  • SAME 80? disparity in depth

19
  • DIFFERENT

20
Mental Rotation
  • Results
  • RT ? w/ angular disparity
  • Interpretation
  • mental rotation has characteristics that mimic
    physical rotation.It is almost as if people are
    actually mentally turning the object about in
    their VSSP.
  • Radvansky, p. 99

21
Central Executive
  • Most complex and least understood component of WM
  • Coordinates activity of slave systems
    supplements their attentional resources
  • Other potential roles
  • coordinating retrieval strategies
  • selective attention
  • temporary activation of LTM,
  • suppression of habitual responses.

22
Measuring WM Capacity
  • Key Idea Performance on complex cognitive task
    reflects a number of different capacities
  • retrieval efficiency
  • processing efficiency
  • attention-free capacity of relevant slave
    system
  • attentional management (ability to focus on
    relevant info inhibit irrelevant info.
  • etc.
  • WM span tasks developed to measure relation
    between WM and performance on complex cognitive
    tasks

23
Daneman Carpenter (1980) Reading Span
  • Read the sentences and recall the LAST word in
    each.

24
  • When at last his eyes opened, there was no gleam
    of triumph, no shade of anger.

25
  • The taxi turned up Michigan Avenue, where they
    had a they had a clear view of the lake.

26
  • The senator who was attacked by the reporter was
    warned by the policeman.

27
  • Recall the last word of each sentence.
  • anger
  • lake
  • policeman

28
Turner Engle (1989) Operation Span
  • Answer each math question and recall final word.

29
  • Is (82)/2 5 HOUSE

30
  • Is (9-3)X4 12? CHAIR

31
  • (43)X2 14? DOG

32
  • Recall words.
  • HOUSE
  • CHAIR
  • DOG

33
WM Memory Span
  • WM span of words recalled
  • Demonstrates capacity for holding load while
    processing.
  • Large individual differences in WM span (2-6
    items)
  • WM span measures predict performance on IQ/
    achievement tests (e.g., SATs).
  • digit/word span uncorrelated with IQ/SAT tests
  • Interpretation Efficient processing of immediate
    task, leaves additional resources for maintaining
    load.

34
Problems w/ Baddeleys WM
  • Influence of LTM on STM tasks
  • chunking
  • proactive interference (Keppel Underwood, 1962)
    release from proactive interference (Wickens,
    1972).
  • semantic similarity can ? span
  • span high frequency words gt low frequency words
  • Problems with Phonological Loop
  • negative word-length effects exist (Lovatt et al.
    2000)
  • under suppression span gt 0 for visually
    presented words.

35
Current WM Model
36
Baddeleys Response The Episodic Buffer
  • A limited capacity temporary storage system that
    is capable of integrating information from a
    variety of sources
  • Controlled by Central Executive
  • Feeds information into and retrieves information
    from LTS
  • Uses a common multidimensional code
  • The Episodic Buffer explicitly links WM and LTM

37
An Alternative WM as Activation
38
WM as Activation Cowans Embedded Processes
Model
  • Central Executive directs and controls voluntary
    processing.
  • Encoding
  • Incoming info activities representation in LTM

39
WM as Activation Cowans Embedded Processes
Model
  • Central Notation
  • LTM in one of 3 states
  • Dormant
  • Activated
  • fades (decays) unless reactivated
  • In focus (of attention)
  • limited to 4 items

40
Span from Active Persepsective
  • Two components
  • read-out from focus
  • activated material, retrieved before decay
  • Predictions
  • factors ? LTM, ? span
  • concreteness (Walker Hulme, 1999)
  • word frequency (Roodenrys Quinlan, 2000)
  • Span gt 0 when rehearsal suppressed

41
Conclusions
  • No pure measure of STM
  • Contents focal info activated LTM
  • Covert Rehearsal
  • one way of keeping info active
  • Functional importance
  • WM provides ability to access info and maintain
    in active state required for thought, language,
    problem-solving, etc
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