The Functional Determinants of Short-Term Memory: Evidence From Perceptual-Motor Interference in Verbal Serial Recall

Hughes, R and Marsh, John Everett orcid iconORCID: 0000-0002-9494-1287 (2016) The Functional Determinants of Short-Term Memory: Evidence From Perceptual-Motor Interference in Verbal Serial Recall. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 43 (4). pp. 537-551. ISSN 0096-1523

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Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/xlm0000325

Abstract

A functional, perceptual-motor, account of serial short-term memory (STM) is examined by investigating the way in which an irrelevant spoken sequence interferes with verbal serial recall. Even with visual list-presentation, verbal serial recall is particularly susceptible to disruption by irrelevant spoken stimuli that have the same identity as— but that are order-incongruent with—the to-be-remembered items. We test the view that such interference is because of the obligatory perceptual organization of the spoken stimuli yielding a sequence that competes with a subvocal motor-plan assembled to support the reproduction of the to-be-remembered list. In support of this view, the interference can be eliminated without changing either the identities or objective serial order of the spoken stimuli but merely by promoting a subjective perceptual organization that strips them of their order-incongruent relation to the to-be-remembered list (Experiment 1). The interference is also eliminated if subvocal motor sequenceplanning is impeded via articulatory suppression (Experiment 2). The results are in line with the view that
performance-limits in verbal serial STM are because of having to exploit perceptual and motor processes
for purposes for which they did not evolve, not the inherently limited capacity of structures or
mechanisms dedicated to storage.


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