“…The extraction of meaning from some syntactic devices would seem to require that strings of words be retained, in their original order, in short-term or working memory. On the other hand, some of the traditional measures of working memory are unconelated with reading achievement (e.g., Guyer and Friedman, 1975;Hunt et al, 1973Hunt et al, ,1975Perfetti and Goldman, 1976;Waters and Doehring, 1990), and Daneman (1987) has suggested that poorer readers may have an impaired reading-specific, functional working memory, rather than any general working memory deficit. There is, on the other hand, much evidence to suggest that phonological storage provides the best medium for the retention of strings of words (e.g., Baddeley, 1979;Conrad, 1979;Jorm, 1983).…”