- Flow of information in memory
- Encoding – Storage – Retrieval
- Multi-store memory
- Sensory – short-term – long-term
- Reconstructive memory
- Belief can alter our memory of something
- Levels of processing
- Structural – appearance (least likely to remember)
- Phonetic – sound (moderate)
- Semantic – meaning (most likely to remember)
- Forgetting
- Retroactive interference – information recently learnt affects previous learning
- Proactive interference – information already learnt affects recent learning
- Context – we recall information better in the same context in which it was learnt
- Retrograde amnesia – damage to hippocampus can make you forget memories before the accident
- Anterograde amnesia – damage to the brain can prevent you from learning new information
- Factors affecting reliability of eyewitness testimony
Leading questions- Context in which questioning takes place
- How quickly after the event the questioning takes place
- Unfamiliar faces are more difficult to identify than familiar ones
- Stereotypes or reconstructive memory
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Test It!
- What is the flow of information in memory?
- Describe the multi-store explanation of memory.
- What is meant by the term ‘reconstructive memory’?
- What practical implications does this have?
- What are the levels of processing? Give examples, where possible, to illustrate your answer.
- What is meant by the terms retroactive interference and proactive interference?
- What affect can brain damage have on memory?
- What factors can influence the accuracy of eyewitness testimony?
- What practical steps can be taken to increase the accuracy of eyewitness testimony?
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Some top tips!
- Print out the Test It! Questions – it will allow you to replicate exam conditions and also allows you to give your eyes a rest from the computer screen whilst doing your crucial revision.
- Make a copy of the Remember It! Section and put in a place that you often look at. i.e. front of a journal, next to a mirror, on a kitchen cupboard door, etc. That way you can do some cheeky psychology revision whilst doing those things you have to do!
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End of section – Congratulations!
Carry on revising GCSE Psychology – Next topic: Non-verbal Communication
We hope this proves useful in your GCSE Psychology revision and it helps whilst you study! The Leaving School guide for those who study psychology.