Current (->) article number 8 of 11 is unmarked
-> single case approach, allows us to show dissociations and double
dissociations among the performance patterns obtained from all three
pathological groups. The paper concludes with a discussion of a
possible interpretation of the recency effect as a emergent property of
all types of memory system, including verbal short-term memory. Taking
into account previous literature as well as our own data, the recency
effect in immediate verbal free recall is here interpreted in terms of
a two-component view of verbal short-term memory.
Acknowledgement. We are grateful to Richard Wright, University of
Missouri St. Louis, for his help in finding the original report by
Nipher (1876). We are also grateful to Cristina Trivelli who tested theI:
majority of the frontal patients, to Val Wynn for testing the English
language subjects, to Alan Baddeley for his advice throughout the
organisation of ion, and to three groups of brain damaged-patients,
namely Alzheimer's, amnesics, and frontals. The standardised norms
offer a clinical and experimental tool which, coupled with a multiple
single case approach, allows us to show dissociations and double
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