Publication | Closed Access
A Working Memory Workout: How to Expand the Focus of Serial Attention From One to Four Items in 10 Hours or Less.
125
Citations
34
References
2004
Year
Extensive Practice StudySelective AttentionCognitionAttentionHuman MemorySocial SciencesPsychologyMemoryWorking MemoryResponse TimeN-back TaskCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesTask PerformanceChunking (Psychology)Experimental PsychologySocial CognitionImplicit MemoryWorking Memory WorkoutProcedural MemoryLong-term Memory
Five individuals participated in an extensive practice study (10 1-hr sessions, 11,000 trials total) on a self-paced identity-judgment (1)n-back task (n ranging from 1 to 5). Within Session 1, response time increased abruptly by about 300 ms in passing from n = 1 to n > 1, suggesting that the focus of attention can accommodate only a single item (H. Caravan, 1998; B. McElree, 2001). Within Session 10, response time was dramatically reduced and increased linearly with n for n < or = 4, with a slope of about 30 ms. The data suggest that working memory consists of a focus of attention governed by a limited-capacity search, expandable through practice, and a content-addressable region outside the focus of attention.
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