Perceptual-Gestural (Mis)Mapping in Serial Short-Term Memory

Hughes, Rob, Marsh, J.E. and Jones, D.M.

(2009)

Hughes, Rob, Marsh, J.E. and Jones, D.M. (2009) Perceptual-Gestural (Mis)Mapping in Serial Short-Term Memory. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 35 (6).

Our Full Text Deposits

Full text access: Open

Full text file - 348.97 KB

Links to Copies of this Item Held Elsewhere


Abstract

The mechanisms underlying the poorer serial recall of talker-variable lists (e.g., alternating female-male voices) as compared with single-voice lists were examined. We tested the novel hypothesis that this talker variability effect arises from the tendency for perceptual organization to partition the list into streams based on voice such that the representation of order maps poorly onto the formation of a gestural sequence-output plan assembled in support of the reproduction of the true temporal order of the items. In line with the hypothesis, (a) the presence of a spoken lead-in designed to further promote by-voice perceptual partitioning accentuates the effect (Experiments 1 and 2); (b) the impairment is larger the greater the acoustic coherence is between nonadjacent items: Alternating-voice lists are more poorly recalled than four-voice lists (Experiment 3); and (c) talker variability combines nonadditively with phonological similarity, consistent with the view that both variables disrupt sequence output planning (Experiment 4). The results support the view that serial short-term memory performance reflects the action of sequencing processes embodied within general-purpose perceptual input-processing and gestural output-planning systems. © 2009 American Psychological Association.

Information about this Version

This is a Submitted version
This version's date is: 1/11/2009
This item is not peer reviewed

Link to this Version

https://repository.royalholloway.ac.uk/items/8aacd96f-e5b1-e7c1-f517-3259a84acdd9/1/

Item TypeJournal Article
TitlePerceptual-Gestural (Mis)Mapping in Serial Short-Term Memory
AuthorsHughes, Rob
Marsh, J.E.
Jones, D.M.
DepartmentsFaculty of Science\Psychology

Identifiers

doihttp://dx.doi.org/10.1037/a0017008

Deposited by Research Information System (atira) on 24-May-2012 in Royal Holloway Research Online.Last modified on 24-May-2012

Notes

MEDLINE® is the source for the MeSH terms of this document.


Details