Heterogeneity of Function in Numerical Cognition 2018
DOI: 10.1016/b978-0-12-811529-9.00019-4
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Working Memory for Serial Order and Numerical Cognition

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Cited by 8 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Item and order information seem to be coded and represented separately (for reviews, see Refs. 23, 24, and 71). Consequentially, various theories have assumed that item information and order information were coded separately, although, up to now, it remains unclear how exactly order is coded in memory.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Item and order information seem to be coded and represented separately (for reviews, see Refs. 23, 24, and 71). Consequentially, various theories have assumed that item information and order information were coded separately, although, up to now, it remains unclear how exactly order is coded in memory.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…6 This idea of a slotted mental line fits well with recent computational models of WM and how they account for order coding. Since the seventies, results (e.g., Bjork & Healy, 1974;Dale, 1987;Engelkamp & Dehn, 2000;Henson, Hartley, Burgess, Hitch, & Flude, 2003;Majerus, Poncelet, Elsen, & van der Linden, 2006;Mulligan, 1999;Sperling & Melchner, 1976) have shown that WM models should account for two distinct kinds of information: memory for the content and memory for the order, which seem to be coded and represented separately (for a review, see Hurlstone, Hitch, & Baddeley, 2014;Majerus & Attout, 2018;Marshuetz, 2005).…”
Section: Slotted Schemas: the Spoarc Effectmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Besides having a robust empirical foundation in the ordinal position effect, the MWH is broadly compatible with existent theoretical insight across various levels, including its link to the powerful framework of neural reuse (Anderson, 2010(Anderson, , 2014; its potential substantiation of the notion of position markers that is core to many computational models on serial order WM; its smooth assimilation in dominant, attention-based perspectives on WM (Cowan, 1998;Oberauer, 2009); and its compatibility with specific hallmarks of serial order WM such as domain-general serial order coding that is representationally distinct from the item level (Hurlstone, Hitch, & Baddeley, 2014;Majerus & Attout, 2018). Hence, there is all reason to explore the behavior of the ordinal position effect under different manipulations in order to falsify, confirm, and/or further specify the MWH´s core premise that spatial cognition supports serial order working memory.…”
mentioning
confidence: 74%