Questions and Answers 100% Pass
Bartlett (1932) - ✔✔Aim:
To determine how social and cultural factors influence schemas and hence can lead to
memory distortions.
Method: Participants were from an English background. Were first asked to read a
Native American folk tale. (The war of Ghosts). He tested their memory by using serial
and repeated reproduction.
Serial reproduction: the first participant reading the story reproduces it on a paper, the
seconds participant reads that paper and reproduces what he/she remembers. And that
goes on until it's reproduced by six/seven different participants.
Repeated reproduction: the same participant reproduces the story six or seven times
from their own previous reproductions. Their reproductions occurred between time
intervals from 15 minutes to as long as 4 months.
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,Results:
Both methods lead to similar results. As the number of reproductions increased, the
story became shorter and there were more changes to the story. The changes made by
the participants in thie reproduction show the alteration of culturally unfamiliar things
into what the English participants were culturally familiar with. He found that recalled
stories were distorted and altered in various ways making it more conventional and
cultural perspective (rationalization).
Conclusion:
Memory is inaccurate and is always subject to reconstruction based on pre-existing
schemas.
Brown and Kulik (1977) - ✔✔Aim:
To investigate correlations between cultures and flashbulb memories
To determine the conditions in which flashbulb memories are created.
Method:
Participants:
40 African-Americans
40 Caucasian Americans
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,Year 20-60
Questionnaires about 10 very unexpected or novel events
9 of them public, 1 personal
Also filled in if they talked about the event with someone (overt rehearsal)
Results:
African Americans:
John f Kennedy:40
Malcolm x:14
Gerald Ford:16
Martin Luther King:30
Caucasian Americans:
John F. Kennedy: 39
Malcolm X:1
Gerald Ford: 23
Martin Luther King:13
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, Remembered vivid memories from the different events
Jfk was the memory that most remembered (79/80)
JFK was also rehearsed the most.
African Americans had more flashbulb memories than Caucasian Americans
The personal FMB was most often a death of someone close.
Most often remembered things:
Place, ongoing activity, information, own affect, other affect and aftermath
Conclusion:
FMB forms from surprising and emotional events and are maintained by overt
rehaearsal.
The difference between FMB and regular memories is FBM being more vivid and longer
lasting
Suggests that Flahshbulb memories form when related to you.
Glanzer and Kunitz (1966) - ✔✔Aim: To test the hypothesis that there are two distinct
storage mechanisms that produce the serial position curve in free recall.
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