The short-term/long-term memory distinction: Back to the past?
Behavioral and Brain Sciences 26 (6):757-758 (2003)
| Abstract | The view that short-term memory should be conceived of as being a process based on the activation of long-term memory is inconsistent with neuropsychological evidence. Data from brain-damaged patients, showing specific patterns of impairment, are compatible with a vision of memory as a multiple-component system, whose different aspects, in neurologically unimpaired subjects, show a high degree of interaction. | |||||||||
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