VCE Psychology · Units 3–4
VCE Psychology Unit 3: Learning & Memory — Flashcards & Quiz
VCE Psychology Unit 3 Learning & Memory examines how humans acquire, store and retrieve information. These 20 free flashcards and 20 true/false quiz questions cover Pavlov’s classical conditioning (UCS, UCR, NS, CS, CR; acquisition, extinction, spontaneous recovery, stimulus generalisation), Skinner’s operant conditioning (positive/negative reinforcement and punishment, shaping, schedules of reinforcement), Bandura’s observational learning and social-learning theory, Atkinson and Shiffrin’s multi-store memory model, Craik and Lockhart’s levels of processing, Tulving’s encoding specificity principle, semantic and episodic memory, hippocampal memory consolidation, Loftus’s reconstructive memory and eyewitness research, interference and cue-dependent forgetting, retrieval processes (recall, recognition, relearning), cognitive biases and heuristics, long-term potentiation as the biological basis of learning, applications of learning theories (systematic desensitisation, token economies), and the VCAA-assessed research-methodology skills. Every card is mapped to the VCAA Psychology Units 3-4 study design and builds the learning-and-memory knowledge required for VCE assessments and ATAR success.
Key Terms
- Classical Conditioning
- Pavlovian learning — a neutral stimulus becomes conditioned through repeated pairing with an unconditioned stimulus that naturally triggers a response.
- Operant Conditioning
- Skinnerian learning — behaviour is shaped by its consequences through positive/negative reinforcement and punishment.
- Observational Learning
- Bandura’s mechanism — learning by observing and imitating models through attention, retention, motor reproduction and motivation.
- Working Memory
- Baddeley and Hitch’s active cognitive workspace with central executive, phonological loop, visuospatial sketchpad and episodic buffer.
- Encoding Specificity
- Tulving’s principle that retrieval is most effective when cues at recall match those at encoding — basis of context and state-dependent memory.
- Long-Term Potentiation
- The long-lasting strengthening of synaptic connections believed to underlie memory formation at the cellular level.
- Reconstructive Memory
- Bartlett’s concept — memory is actively reconstructed by schemas rather than passively recorded, producing systematic distortions.
Sample Flashcards
Q1: Explain classical conditioning using Pavlov’s experiment as an example.
Classical conditioning is a learning process where a neutral stimulus (NS) becomes associated with an unconditioned stimulus (UCS) through repeated pairing, eventually producing a conditioned response (CR). In Pavlov’s experiment: the bell (NS) was repeatedly paired with food (UCS, which naturally caused salivation — UCR). After conditioning, the bell alone (now a conditioned stimulus, CS) triggered salivation (CR).
Q2: Explain extinction, spontaneous recovery and stimulus generalisation in classical conditioning.
Extinction: the gradual weakening of a CR when the CS is repeatedly presented without the UCS. Spontaneous recovery: the reappearance of an extinguished CR after a rest period. Stimulus generalisation: a CR occurs in response to stimuli similar to the original CS. Stimulus discrimination: the ability to distinguish between the CS and similar stimuli, responding only to the CS.
Q3: Compare positive reinforcement, negative reinforcement, positive punishment and negative punishment.
Positive reinforcement: adding a pleasant stimulus to increase behaviour (e.g. praise after studying). Negative reinforcement: removing an unpleasant stimulus to increase behaviour (e.g. taking painkillers removes a headache, increasing future painkiller use). Positive punishment: adding an unpleasant stimulus to decrease behaviour (e.g. receiving a detention). Negative punishment: removing a pleasant stimulus to decrease behaviour (e.g. losing phone privileges).
Q4: Describe the four schedules of reinforcement and their effects on behaviour.
Fixed-ratio (FR): reinforcement after a set number of responses — produces high, steady response rates with brief pauses after reinforcement. Variable-ratio (VR): reinforcement after an unpredictable number of responses — produces highest, most consistent response rates, highly resistant to extinction. Fixed-interval (FI): reinforcement for the first response after a set time period — produces scalloped response pattern. Variable-interval (VI): reinforcement for the first response after an unpredictable time period — produces moderate, steady response rates.
Q5: Explain Bandura’s social learning theory and the Bobo doll experiment.
Bandura’s social learning theory proposes that learning occurs through observing and imitating models. The Bobo doll experiment (1961) demonstrated that children who observed an adult behaving aggressively toward an inflatable doll were more likely to imitate the aggressive behaviour. Key processes: attention (noticing the model’s behaviour), retention (remembering it), reproduction (ability to perform it) and motivation (incentive to imitate, influenced by vicarious reinforcement or punishment).
Q6: Describe the Atkinson–Shiffrin multi-store model of memory.
The Atkinson–Shiffrin model (1968) proposes three sequential memory stores: Sensory memory — holds unprocessed sensory information very briefly (iconic: ~0.5s, echoic: ~3–4s). Short-term memory (STM) — holds limited information (~7±2 items) for a short duration (~18–30s without rehearsal). Long-term memory (LTM) — unlimited capacity and potentially permanent duration. Information transfers between stores via attention (sensory to STM) and rehearsal (STM to LTM).
Q7: What is the difference between semantic and episodic memory?
Semantic memory stores general knowledge, facts and concepts independent of personal experience (e.g. knowing that Canberra is Australia’s capital). Episodic memory stores personally experienced events with contextual details including time, place and emotions (e.g. remembering your first day at school). Both are subtypes of explicit (declarative) long-term memory, distinct from implicit (procedural) memory.
Q8: What is the encoding specificity principle?
The encoding specificity principle (Tulving & Thomson, 1973) states that retrieval is most effective when the cues present at retrieval match the cues present at encoding. This includes context-dependent cues (physical environment) and state-dependent cues (internal physiological or emotional state). Information is more likely to be recalled when the encoding and retrieval conditions are similar.
Sample Quiz Questions
Q1: In Pavlov’s experiment, the bell was the unconditioned stimulus (UCS) that naturally caused salivation.
Answer: FALSE
The bell was initially a neutral stimulus (NS) that became the conditioned stimulus (CS) after repeated pairing with food. The food was the unconditioned stimulus (UCS) that naturally caused salivation (UCR).
Q2: Spontaneous recovery refers to the reappearance of an extinguished conditioned response after a rest period.
Answer: TRUE
After extinction, a conditioned response may spontaneously reappear after a period of rest, though it is usually weaker than the original response. This suggests that extinction suppresses rather than eliminates the learned association.
Q3: Negative reinforcement involves adding an unpleasant stimulus to decrease a behaviour.
Answer: FALSE
Negative reinforcement involves removing an unpleasant stimulus to increase a behaviour. Adding an unpleasant stimulus to decrease behaviour is positive punishment. "Reinforcement" always increases behaviour; "punishment" always decreases it.
Q4: Variable-ratio schedules of reinforcement produce the highest response rates and are most resistant to extinction.
Answer: TRUE
Variable-ratio schedules (reinforcement after an unpredictable number of responses) produce the highest and most consistent response rates because the organism cannot predict when reinforcement will occur, so it continues responding. This is why gambling behaviour is highly persistent.
Q5: Bandura’s social learning theory states that all learning requires direct experience and reinforcement.
Answer: FALSE
Bandura’s social learning theory proposes that learning can occur through observation alone, without direct experience or reinforcement. The Bobo doll experiment showed children could learn aggressive behaviour simply by watching a model, with vicarious reinforcement influencing motivation to imitate.
Why It Matters
Learning and memory are central to the VCE Psychology course because they explain how humans acquire knowledge, develop skills and retain information across the lifespan. Understanding classical conditioning, operant conditioning and observational learning provides a framework for analysing human behaviour in educational, clinical and everyday contexts — from systematic desensitisation for phobias to token economies in schools and prosocial modelling in media. The memory models (multi-store, working memory, levels of processing) and retrieval processes covered in this topic are not only directly assessed in the VCAA exam but are also practical tools you can apply to optimise your own study. Concepts such as spacing, retrieval practice, encoding specificity and long-term potentiation are evidence-based strategies that directly improve academic performance. Mastering these theories also prepares you for Unit 4 topics, where you will explore how mental health conditions and sleep disruption can impair learning and memory processes, and for university-level psychology study beyond school.
Key Concepts
Classical Conditioning
Understanding how neutral stimuli become associated with reflexive responses through repeated pairing is foundational. VCAA exams require you to correctly label UCS, UCR, NS, CS and CR in novel scenarios, and to explain processes such as extinction, spontaneous recovery and generalisation.
Operant Conditioning and Reinforcement Schedules
Knowing how consequences shape voluntary behaviour through reinforcement and punishment is essential. The four schedules of reinforcement (fixed-ratio, variable-ratio, fixed-interval, variable-interval) each produce distinct response patterns that VCAA commonly tests through scenario-based questions.
Observational Learning (Social Learning Theory)
Bandura’s theory explains learning through observation without direct reinforcement. The ARRM model (attention, retention, reproduction, motivation) and the Bobo doll experiment are key content assessed in VCAA exams, including evaluation of the study’s methodology and ethical considerations.
Memory Models and Retrieval Processes
The Atkinson–Shiffrin multi-store model, types of long-term memory (semantic, episodic, procedural) and retrieval processes (recall, recognition, relearning) are core exam content. Understanding forgetting through retrieval failure and interference theory demonstrates depth of knowledge that VCAA rewards.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Confusing negative reinforcement with punishment — reinforcement (positive or negative) always INCREASES behaviour; punishment always DECREASES behaviour.
- Mislabelling stimuli and responses in classical conditioning — the UCS naturally elicits the UCR; the NS becomes the CS only after pairing.
- Confusing proactive (old disrupts new) and retroactive (new disrupts old) interference.
- Treating multi-store and working memory models as competing rather than complementary — working memory extends the multi-store framework.
- Omitting specific studies (Pavlov, Skinner, Bandura, Atkinson & Shiffrin 1968, Baddeley & Hitch 1974, Loftus & Palmer 1974, Bartlett 1932) — VCAA expects evidence-based responses.
Study Tips
- Create a comparison table of classical conditioning, operant conditioning and observational learning, listing key researchers, processes, strengths and limitations of each.
- Practise identifying UCS, UCR, NS, CS and CR in novel scenarios — VCAA commonly presents unfamiliar examples and asks you to label the conditioning components.
- Use real-world examples for each schedule of reinforcement (e.g. salary for fixed-interval, poker machines for variable-ratio) to make the concepts memorable and applicable.
- Draw the Atkinson–Shiffrin model from memory, including capacity, duration and encoding type for each store — this is a high-frequency VCAA diagram question.
- Apply the learning and memory concepts to your own study: use spaced repetition (spacing effect), test yourself (retrieval practice) and study in your exam environment (encoding specificity).
- Memorise key studies (Pavlov, Watson & Rayner, Skinner, Bandura, Godden & Baddeley, Atkinson & Shiffrin) with researcher names, year, method and findings for each.
Related Topics
Exam Prep & Study Notes
Frequently Asked Questions
What does VCE Psychology Unit 3 cover about learning and memory?
Unit 3 covers learning theories (classical conditioning, operant conditioning, observational learning), memory models (Atkinson–Shiffrin multi-store model), encoding processes, storage types (sensory, short-term, long-term memory) and retrieval mechanisms including recall, recognition and relearning.
Are these flashcards aligned to the VCAA study design?
Yes — every flashcard and quiz question is mapped to the VCAA VCE Psychology Units 3–4 study design for the learning and memory area of study.
What are the best study strategies for learning and memory topics?
Apply the concepts you are studying — use spaced repetition (spacing effect), elaborate rehearsal (deep processing) and retrieval practice (testing effect). These strategies are themselves evidence-based memory techniques covered in the Unit 3 curriculum.
Last updated: March 2026 · 20 flashcards · 20 quiz questions · Content aligned to the VCAA Study Design