1969
DOI: 10.3758/bf03210660
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Precategorical acoustic storage (PAS)

Abstract: Fig. I. An incomplete conceptual diagram of information flow in immediate memory tasks. No reference whatever to locations or pathways in the nervous system isimplied. PRELIMINARY DESCRIPTION OF THE MODELThe overall schema in which we are operating is given in Fig. I. Our preliminary assumptions are based on a clear distinction between information which has been categorized (i.e., identified or perceived) and information which has not been categorized. Like Tulving (1968) we see no defensible reason for distin… Show more

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Cited by 775 publications
(652 citation statements)
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“…Although the suffix effect has been examined repeatedly in the verbal literature (e.g., Bloom & Watkins, 1999;Crowder & Morton, 1969;Penney, 1985;Watkins & Watkins, 1980), aside from the present study we are not aware of any investigation directly examining the suffix effect in visuospatial serial memory. The suffix effect found in our experiments adds to the increasing evidence pointing out the functional similarities of verbal and nonverbal memory (Avons, 1998;Avons & Masson, 1999;Farrand & Jones, 1996;Jones et al, 1995), insofar as recency for visuospatial items was affected by a suffix of the same modality.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%
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“…Although the suffix effect has been examined repeatedly in the verbal literature (e.g., Bloom & Watkins, 1999;Crowder & Morton, 1969;Penney, 1985;Watkins & Watkins, 1980), aside from the present study we are not aware of any investigation directly examining the suffix effect in visuospatial serial memory. The suffix effect found in our experiments adds to the increasing evidence pointing out the functional similarities of verbal and nonverbal memory (Avons, 1998;Avons & Masson, 1999;Farrand & Jones, 1996;Jones et al, 1995), insofar as recency for visuospatial items was affected by a suffix of the same modality.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…In the verbal domain, when the suffix differs from the TBR on some perceptual dimension, the effect of that suffix is attenuated. For example, Morton, Crowder, and Prussin (1971) showed that a change of voice or spatial location between the TBR items and the suffix reduces the suffix effect (see also Balota & Engle, 1981;Crowder & Morton, 1969;LeCompte & Watkins, 1995;Watkins & Watkins, 1980). These studies suggest that a perceptual change reduces the disruptive potency of the suffix.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
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“…Crowder and Morton (1969) presented evidence for a precategorical acoustic store (PAS) which could retain acoustic information for as long as 2 sec. In further experiments, however, Crowder (1971Crowder ( , 1973 found that stop consonants were not well retained in PAS.…”
Section: Individual Differencesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Whereas comprehensible, clear speech has a rich linguistic structure and can be easily retained in auditory-verbal short-term memory (STM), distorted speech is less comprehensible and thus cannot engage verbal STM processes as effectively. Listeners are therefore likely to rely more on an auditory echoic store (Crowder & Morton, 1969) to retain poorly comprehended, distorted sentences without additional support from phonological or lexical representations. Reliance on an auditory echoic store might prevent effective comparisons between distorted sentences and subsequently presented clear feedback presentations as the intervening several seconds of speech would overwrite auditory echoic representations.…”
Section: Perceptual Learning Of Noise-vocoded Speechmentioning
confidence: 99%