A Lecture in Psychology: Working Memory: Theories, Models, and Controversies
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- čas přidán 19. 07. 2024
- Alan Baddeley, Professor of Psychology at the University of York, talks about his autobiographical article "Working Memory: Theories, Models, and Controversies," which he wrote for the 2012 Annual Review of Psychology. In this lecture, Dr. Baddeley describes the evolving approaches to understanding memory over the course of the 20th century, and how he came to develop the multicomponent approach to working memory as a theoretical framework. He then links it to long-term memory, perception, and action, and explains how they interact.
Read the related review article "Working Memory: Theories, Models, and Controversies," online at www.annualreviews.org/doi/abs/.... - Věda a technologie
This is the first time I see Dr. Allan Baddeley. He sent many articles years ago about memory for my dissertations. It is so emotional. It is so exciting. It is like meeting a rock star after hearing (and reading) about him many years uncountable times. So lovely! Greta lecture!
I was studying Mr Baddeley's work in my textbook, this really helped me understand the concept. Thank you
Bless you for uploading this. And bless you Alan Baddeley for your helpful lecture and intuitive thinking. It has been of much help to me
18:05 CE
19:55 PL 27:10 EB
Thanks for this. Helped a lot in understanding the material in my textbook
Thank you for this and also for the link that Simon Stewart asked for! :)
Clarity inducing, many thanks.
Good Man. Like to play this when I cant sleep...works like a charm
This is excellent, thank you so much for uploading.
The inner voice is dependent on the subvocalization (larynx movements and other muscles), so we use body to help auditory imagery, the visual imagery requires the "inner scribe" but which muscles does it use? If not eye movement, than what ? Tense face muscles ? Or it is not supported by body work as phonological loop is ?
I thanks Professor Baddeley.
Great lecture!
Thank you kindly for this lecture. This has straightened out a lot of questions I had. Could you perhaps provide a link to the work you are reading for citation purposes?
We're glad to hear it was helpful. Here is the article to which the lecture is attached: www.annualreviews.org/doi/abs/10.1146/annurev-psych-120710-100422
@@annualreviewsscience Thank you very much. It is much useful.
PS Alfredo, I don't have the best of speakers on my computer, but I found that using my headphones made the volume fine :)
Simply brilliant
Does anybody know where I could get the real transcript for this, not just the automatic one?
Could anybody perhaps clear up for me the proposed role of Perception and conscious awareness in the WM model? Is this related to the Episodic Buffer or Central Executive? thanks
Central Executive
Great Lecture.
Interested lecture
Respect!
The volume on this video is super low. I barely hear the speaker give the lecture with my volume set to the highest setting. :\
I put on headphones and that helped
Why does no one speak of Harry Lorraine as the great motivator of memory studies?
I'm sure it was in 1956 when his book on how to develop a supermemory first appeared (later published in 1966: How to Acquire a Supermemory). I am sure that at that time of circus novelties where magicians and people with some condition that classified them as circus freaks were presented, perhaps the young researcher Atkinson or the adolescent Shiffrin witnessed some act that aroused great curiosity about how memory worked. One of these days I'll call them and ask them directly, I'm sure they'll use their memory and remember the trigger that motivated them to investigate.
Can't hear anything
playback speed 1.25
What if I’m related to this man I may actually be 😮 I’m a Baddeley myself !
Hello, Mr. Taylor
You guys really screwed the pooch by not studying aphantasia back in the 70's. New research on aphants with no minds eye and no ability to re-experiance memory is about to change how memory is thought to work. www.academia.edu/35252937/What_is_it_like_to_remember_something_SDAM_aphantasia_and_the_role_of_imagery_in_memory
🐋