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The uses of short-term memory: A case study
Authors:Brian Butterworth   Ruth Campbell  David Howard
Affiliation: a Psychology Department, University College, London, U.K.b Department of Experimental Psychology, Oxford University, U.K.c Psychology Department, University College London, U.K., and Speech Therapy Department, Eastern Hospital, Hackney
Abstract:It has been widely claimed that the systems employed in tasks of immediate memory have a function in the comprehension of speech; these systems, it has been proposed, are used to hold a representation of the speech until a syntactic analysis and interpretation have been completed. Such a holding function is meant to be especially important where the sentences heard are long or complex. It has thus been predicted that subjects with impaired short-term memory performance would show deficits in comprehension of such materials.

In this study, one subject with impaired phonological processing and a severely reduced digit span was tested on a range of tasks requiring the syntactic analysis, memory and comprehension of long and complex material. She was found to be unimpaired on syntactic analysis and comprehension, but not on sentence repetition. The implications for models of short-term memory are discussed.
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