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Alan_Baddeley

Iet uz wiki rakstu

  • Alan David Baddeley CBE FRS (born 23 March 1934) is a British psychologist. He is known for his research on memory and for developing the three-component model of working memory. He is a professor of psychology at the University of York.
  • Baddeley was born in Leeds, Yorkshire on 23 March 1934.&#91;1&#93; He lived there with his parents, Donald and Nellie Baddeley, until leaving for university.&#91;2&#93; He decided to study psychology and was originally interested in psychoanalysis. Later he changed his focus to evidence-based psychology.&#91;3&#93; In 1956, Baddeley went to the United States of America to continue his studies. After spending a year in America, he returned home. He then went to Cambridge, where he met and married Hilary Ann White. Baddeley and his wife have three sons.&#91;2&#93;
  • Baddeley has taught and conducted research at University of Sussex, University of Stirling, MRC Applied Psychology Unit, Churchill College, University of Cambridge, and University of Bristol. He is currently a professor of psychology at the University of York.&#91;4&#93;
  • Baddeley attended the University College London from 1953 to 1956. He then obtained an MA from Princeton University's Department of Psychology in 1957. He earned a PhD from University of Cambridge in 1962.&#91;5&#93; He has been awarded Honorary Doctorates by University of Essex in 1999,&#91;6&#93; Plymouth University in 2000,&#91;7&#93; and University of Bristol in 2019.&#91;8&#93;
  • In 1974, working with Graham Hitch, Baddeley developed an influential model of working memory called Baddeley's model of working memory,&#91;9&#93; which argues for the existence of multiple short-term memory stores and a separate interacting system for manipulating the content of these stores. There are three components of this model: the phonological loop, the central executive, and the visuospatial sketch pad.&#91;9&#93; In 2000, Baddeley suggested adding a fourth component to his memory model called the episodic buffer.&#91;10&#93; The model accounts for much of the empirical data on short-term retention and manipulation of information.
  • His landmark study in 1975 on the capacity of short-term memory&#91;11&#93; showed that people remembered more short words than long words in a recall test. This was called the word length effect and it demonstrated that pronunciation time rather than number of items determines the capacity of verbal short-term memory. This study also found that when participants repeated an irrelevant sound while reading the words, the word length effect does not happen.&#91;11&#93;
  • Working with Barbara Wilson, Baddeley also did several important studies on amnesia and memory.&#91;12&#93;&#91;13&#93; They studied patients with temporal lobe damage that caused memory problems. Results of such studies provide evidence that short-term and long-term memory are not one system. The amnesia patients had normal short-term memory but impaired long-term memory.&#91;14&#93;
  • Baddeley has also done research studies using divers and various underwater conditions. He studied the effects of depth and pressure on dexterity,&#91;15&#93; the impact of temperature on response time,&#91;16&#93; and context-dependent memory on land and underwater.&#91;17&#93;
  • Baddeley was the director of the Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, a branch of the UK Medical Research Council, based in Cambridge, from 1974 - 1997.&#91;18&#93; He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1993&#91;19&#93; and in 1996, was elected a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.&#91;20&#93; In 2001, Baddeley received the American Psychological Association (APA) Award for Distinguished Scientific Contributions.&#91;21&#93; Baddeley was given the Lifetime Achievement Award by the British Psychological Society in 2012.&#91;22&#93; He also received the Major Advancement in Psychological Science Prize from the International Union of Psychological Science in 2016.&#91;23&#93;
  • Baddeley has also part authored a number of neuropsychological tests including the Doors and People,&#91;24&#93; Children's Test of Nonword Repetition (CN REP),&#91;25&#93; the Rivermead Behavioural Memory Test (RBMT),&#91;26&#93; Autobiographical Memory Interview (AMI),&#91;27&#93; Visual Patterns Test (VPT)&#91;28&#93; and the Speed and Capacity of Language Processing Test (SCOLP).&#91;29&#93;
  • Baddeley was involved in the design of United Kingdom postcodes,&#91;30&#93; and was one of the founders of the European Society for Cognitive Psychology.&#91;31&#93;