Serial memory processing: Difference between revisions

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'''Serial memory processing''' is the act of attending to and processing one item at a time. This is usually contrasted against parallel memory processing, which is the act of attending to and processing all items simultaneously.
In short-term memory tasks, participants are given a set of items (e.g. letters, digits) one at a time and then, after varying periods of delay, are asked for recall of the items. As well, participants could be asked whether a specific target item was present in their original set. Serial memory processors would compare one item at a time, from their original set, and would not move to the next comparison until the previous is complete.<ref name=Townsend>Townsend, J. & Fific, M. (2004). Parallel versus serial processing and individual differences in high-speed search in human memory. ''Perception & Psychophysics, 66''(6).</ref>
 
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- LH found to be better at serial processing and serial memory comparison than RH <ref name=Boyle />.
===''Models''===
- [[ACT-R]] is Adaptive Control of Thought-Rational. This model help to hierarchically organize serial memory. In this model, declarative memory works to encode the position of items while the production memory works to organize recall of items. This is a limited-capacity model, where there is a limited amount of activation available. This theorizes that longer memory sets lead to longer recall because the amount of activation available is divided among more items. The ACT-R models the serial position error <ref name=Naire /> and the independent acoustic errors <ref name = Bjork /> near perfectly. <ref name=Anderson />
==Article Briefs==