Developmental evidence for working memory as activated long-term memory
Behavioral and Brain Sciences 26 (6):750-750 (2003)
| Abstract | There is remarkable agreement between Ruchkin et al.'s psychophysiological views and my own model, based on developmental-experimental evidence, of working memory as activated long-term memory (LTM). I construe subvocal rehearsal as an operative scheme that maintains order information and demands attentional resources. Encoding and retrieving operations also demand attention. Another share of resources is used for keeping activated specific LTM representations. | |||||||||
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