Publication | Closed Access
Memory Processing of Serial Lists by Pigeons, Monkeys, and People
323
Citations
19
References
1985
Year
List MemoryCognitionAttentionHuman MemoryExplicit MemorySocial SciencesMemoryTravel SlidesCognitive NeuroscienceCognitive ScienceMemory SystemExperimental PsychologyVisual FunctionMnemonicAssociative Memory (Psychology)Memory ProcessingNeuroscienceSpatial CognitionAnimal BehaviorVisual Items
List memory of pigeons, monkeys, and humans was tested with lists of four visual items (travel slides for animals and kaleidoscope patterns for humans). Retention interval increases for list-item memory revealed a consistent modification of the serial-position function shape: a monotonically increasing function at the shortest interval, a U-shaped function at intermediate intervals, and a monotonically decreasing function at the longest interval. The time course of these changes was fastest for pigeons, intermediate for monkeys, and slowest for humans.
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