Contribution of articulatory rehearsal to short-term memory: evidence from a case of selective disruption
- PMID: 1483199
- DOI: 10.1016/0093-934x(92)90092-s
Contribution of articulatory rehearsal to short-term memory: evidence from a case of selective disruption
Abstract
We describe a brain-damaged patient with disturbed articulatory rehearsal in whom all predictions derived from a working memory model were fulfilled. The patient showed a reduced verbal span, no word-length effect on immediate recall in both the visual or the auditory modalities, no phonological similarity effect in the visual modality, and no effect of articulatory suppression. A slowed overt articulation rate provided independent evidence for disrupted articulatory rehearsal. The other components of working memory, the visuospatial scratch-pad, phonological storage system, and central executive, were functional. The selectivity of the deficit can be taken as evidence for the specific role of articulatory rehearsal in working memory.
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical