| Literature DB >> 17854286 |
John Jonides1, Richard L Lewis, Derek Evan Nee, Cindy A Lustig, Marc G Berman, Katherine Sledge Moore.
Abstract
The past 10 years have brought near-revolutionary changes in psychological theories about short-term memory, with similarly great advances in the neurosciences. Here, we critically examine the major psychological theories (the "mind") of short-term memory and how they relate to evidence about underlying brain mechanisms. We focus on three features that must be addressed by any satisfactory theory of short-term memory. First, we examine the evidence for the architecture of short-term memory, with special attention to questions of capacity and how--or whether--short-term memory can be separated from long-term memory. Second, we ask how the components of that architecture enact processes of encoding, maintenance, and retrieval. Third, we describe the debate over the reason about forgetting from short-term memory, whether interference or decay is the cause. We close with a conceptual model tracing the representation of a single item through a short-term memory task, describing the biological mechanisms that might support psychological processes on a moment-by-moment basis as an item is encoded, maintained over a delay with some forgetting, and ultimately retrieved.Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 17854286 PMCID: PMC3971378 DOI: 10.1146/annurev.psych.59.103006.093615
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Annu Rev Psychol ISSN: 0066-4308 Impact factor: 24.137