Abstract

Sequences of 6 letters of the alphabet were visually presented for immediate recall to 387 subjects. Errors showed a systematic relationship to original stimuli. This is held to meet a requirement of the decay theory of immediate memory. The same letter vocabulary was used in a test in which subjects were required to identify the letters spoken against a white noise background. A highly significant correlation was found between letters which confused in the listening test, and letters which confused in recall. The role of neurological noise in recall is discussed in relation to these results. It is further argued that information theory is inadequate to explain the memory span, since the nature of the stimulus set, which can be defined quantitatively, as well as the information per item, is likely to be a determining factor.

Keywords

PsychologyRecallMemory spanAlphabetStimulus (psychology)Cognitive psychologyActive listeningVocabularyRecall testSet (abstract data type)Free recallCognitionCommunicationLinguisticsWorking memoryNeuroscience

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Publication Info

Year
1964
Type
article
Volume
55
Issue
1
Pages
75-84
Citations
1402
Access
Closed

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Cite This

Rupert Conrad (1964). ACOUSTIC CONFUSIONS IN IMMEDIATE MEMORY. British Journal of Psychology , 55 (1) , 75-84. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.2044-8295.1964.tb00899.x

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DOI
10.1111/j.2044-8295.1964.tb00899.x