“…With such a widely utilized, yet diverse, collection of WM tasks, an obvious question arises: How similar are these tasks to one another with respect to the mental processes, and strategies, that they evoke? While traditional behavioral research (Cowan, 2001; Luck & Vogel, 2013), psychometric studies (Engle, Tuholski, Laughlin, & Conway, 1999; Kane et al, 2004), and cognitive neuroimaging investigations (Nee et al, 2013; Wager & Smith, 2003) all provide some evidence that distinct WM tasks do draw upon shared processes, they also provide evidence that these tasks can operate quite differently from one another with respect to the behavioral phenomena they elicit (Morrison, Conway, & Chein, 2014; Oberauer, 2003; Ricker & Cowan, 2014), the variance they account for across individuals (Unsworth, Fukuda, Awh, & Vogel, 2014), and the specific brain circuitry that they activate (Chein, Moore, & Conway, 2011; Henson, Shallice, Gorno-Tempini, & Dolan, 2002; Zanto, Clapp, Rubens, Karlsson, & Gazzaley, 2016). …”