The maxispan procedure makes the phonological similarity effect disappear while increasing recall performance.

Psychon Bull Rev

Faculté de Psychologie et des Sciences de L'Éducation, Université de Genève, 40 Boulevard du Pont d'Arve, 1200 Genève 4, Genève, Switzerland.

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Barrouillet et al. proposed that working memory has two maintenance systems: an articulatory loop and an attentional executive loop, and found that effectively using these systems can significantly improve recall performance.
  • They created the maxispan procedure, where participants rehearse a limited number of items aloud, which enhances recall and eliminates the phonological similarity effect (PSE).
  • Experiments confirmed that if too many items are rehearsed, the articulatory loop becomes overloaded, leading to confusion in recalling similar-sounding items, and the PSE reappears.

Article Abstract

Based on the hypothesis of two maintenance mechanisms of verbal information in working memory, an articulatory loop and an attentional executive loop, Barrouillet et al. predicted and observed that facilitating the optimal use and separation of these two systems results in a strong increase in recall performance. They developed for this purpose the maxispan procedure, in which participants cumulatively rehearse aloud a limited number of the first items of the series (i.e., three or four) and keep rehearsing them until the end of the series before recall. Beyond increasing recall performance, the model also predicts that the maxispan procedure should also abolish the phonological similarity effect (PSE, the poorer recall of phonologically similar than dissimilar items) in both the rehearsed and the nonrehearsed items by permitting the perfect maintenance of the former in a nonoverloaded articulatory loop and preventing storage of phonological traces of the latter in the attentional system. However, the PSE should reappear if too many items are verbally rehearsed in the maxispan procedure. In this case, the overload of the articulatory loop should lead to offload its content into the attentional system where phonologically similar traces are prone to confusion. We tested and verified these hypotheses in two experiments.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3758/s13423-024-02594-1DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

maxispan procedure
16
recall performance
12
articulatory loop
12
phonological similarity
8
increasing recall
8
attentional system
8
recall
5
maxispan
4
procedure phonological
4
similarity disappear
4

Similar Publications

The maxispan procedure makes the phonological similarity effect disappear while increasing recall performance.

Psychon Bull Rev

October 2024

Faculté de Psychologie et des Sciences de L'Éducation, Université de Genève, 40 Boulevard du Pont d'Arve, 1200 Genève 4, Genève, Switzerland.

Article Synopsis
  • Barrouillet et al. proposed that working memory has two maintenance systems: an articulatory loop and an attentional executive loop, and found that effectively using these systems can significantly improve recall performance.
  • They created the maxispan procedure, where participants rehearse a limited number of items aloud, which enhances recall and eliminates the phonological similarity effect (PSE).
  • Experiments confirmed that if too many items are rehearsed, the articulatory loop becomes overloaded, leading to confusion in recalling similar-sounding items, and the PSE reappears.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Verbal working memory (WM) has been assumed to involve 2 different systems of maintenance, a phonological loop and a central attentional system. Though the capacity estimate for letters of each of these systems is about 4, the maximum number of letters that individuals are able to immediately recall, a measure known as simple span, is not about 8 but 6. We tested the hypothesis that, unaware of the dual structure of their verbal WM, individuals underuse it by trying to verbally rehearse too many items.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!