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Selective short-term memory deficits arise from impaired domain-general semantic control mechanisms

Hoffman, P., Jefferies, E., Ehsan, S., Hopper, S., Lambon Ralph, M. A

Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory and Cognition. 2009;35(1):137-156.

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Abstract

Semantic short-term memory (STM) patients have a reduced ability to retain semantic information over brief delays but perform well on other semantic tasks; this pattern suggests damage to a dedicated buffer for semantic information. Alternatively, these difficulties may arise from mild disruption to domaingeneral semantic processes that have their greatest impact on demanding STM tasks. In this study, mild semantic processing impairments were demonstrated in 2 semantic STM patients. They performed well on untimed semantic tasks but were deficient in accuracy and reaction times on speeded tasks. Demanding semantic production tasks were also affected. These patients were compared with a case series of individuals with semantic aphasia whose multimodal semantic difficulties stemmed from poor cognitive control. STM and semantic performance were more impaired in this group, but there were qualitative similarities to the semantic STM patients. The difference between the 2 patient types may be a matter of degree. In semantic aphasia, severe disruption to semantic control leads to global semantic impairments, whereas in semantic STM milder disruption might impact mainly on STM tests because of the high control demands of these tasks.

Bibliographic metadata

Type of resource:
Content type:
Publication type:
Publication form:
Published date:
Volume:
35
Issue:
1
Start page:
137
End page:
156
Total:
19
Digital Object Identifier:
10.1037/a0013985
Access state:
Active

Institutional metadata

University researcher(s):

Record metadata

Manchester eScholar ID:
uk-ac-man-scw:75442
Created by:
Hoffman, Paul
Created:
3rd December, 2009, 23:56:04
Last modified by:
Hoffman, Paul
Last modified:
30th November, 2014, 19:28:15

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