Interactions between short-term and long-term memory in the verbal domain
Annabel Thorn (Editor), Mike Page (Editor)
The relationship between short and long-term memory systems is an issue of central concern to memory theorists. This book is the first single publication to comprehensively address this key issue.
xii, 317 pages : illustrations (black and white) ; 24 cm
9780415648646, 0415648645
1120883975
A. Thorn, M. Page, Current Issues in Understanding Interactions between Short-Term and Long-Term Memory. A. Surprenant, I. Neath, The Nine Lives of Short-Term Memory. G. Ward, L. Tan, P. Bhatarah, The Roles of Short-Term and Long-Term Verbal Memory in Free and Serial Recall: Towards a Recency-Based Perspective. R. Allen, A. Baddeley, Working Memory and Sentence Recall. N. Cowan, Z. Chen, How Chunks Form in Long-Term Memory and Affect Short-Term Memory Limits. P. Gupta, A Computational Model of Nonword Repetition, Immediate Serial Recall, and Nonword Learning. M. Page, D. Norris, Is There A Common Mechanism Underlying Word-Form Learning and the Hebb Repetition Effect? Experimental Data and a Modelling Framework. G. Stuart, C. Hulme, Lexical and Semantic Influences on Immediate Serial Recall: A Role for Redintegration. S. Roodenrys, Explaining Phonological Neighbourhood Effects in Short-Term Memory. A. Thorn, C. Frankish, S. Gathercole, The Influence of Long-Term Knowledge on Short-Term Memory: Evidence for Multiple Mechanisms. N. Martin, The Roles of Semantic and Phonological Processing in Short-Term Memory and Learning: Evidence from Aphasia. S. Majerus, Verbal Short-Term Memory and Temporary Activation of Language Representations: The Importance of Distinguishing Item and Order Information. E. Service, From Auditory Traces to Language Learning: Behavioural and Neurophysiological Evidence.
Originally published: 2009