Short-term memory processes in counting |
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Authors: | Alice F. Healy James S. Nairne |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Critical Care Medicine, Shanghai General Hospital of Nanjing Medical University, Shanghai, China;2. Department of Cardiology, Tangshan Central Hospital, Tangshan, China;3. Department of Cardiology, Kailuan Hospital, North China University of Science and Technology, Tangshan, China;4. Department of Emergency and Critical Care Medicine, Shanghai General Hospital, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine, Shanghai, China;5. Department of Cardiology, Shanghai General Hospital, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine, Shanghai, China;1. Department of Neurology, Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, United States of America;2. Departments of Psychiatry and Neurology, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, United States of America |
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Abstract: | Four experiments examined the memory processes used to maintain location in a counting sequence. In Experiment 1, subjects who rapidly counted forward omitted many repeated-digit numbers (e.g., 77), as found previously with backward counting. Subjects in Experiment 2 counted backward with normal auditory feedback or with headphones through which white noise was channeled. In both cases, repeated-digit errors predominated, suggesting that the contents of short-term memory, rather than auditory sensory memory, are checked during counting. In Experiment 3, subjects silently wrote counting responses, and the omission errors resembled those in vocal counting. Repetition errors were also found and attributed to phonological recoding failures. Articulatory suppression in Experiment 4 greatly increased the number of repetition errors in the written counting task. A model of the counting process was proposed according to which subjects keep track of their location in the counting sequence by monitoring phonologically coded short-term memory representations of the numbers. |
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