shallow processing

shallow processing

cognitive processing of a stimulus that focuses on its superficial, perceptual characteristics rather than its meaning. It is considered that processing at this shallow level produces weaker, shorter-lasting memories than deep processing. See levels-of-processing model of memory. See also bottom-up processing. [proposed in 1972 by Canadian psychologists Fergus I. M. Craik (1935–  ) and Robert S. Lockhart]