Memory Capacity and Intelligence: Novel Techniques for Evaluating Rival Models of a Fundamental Information-Processing Mechanism
- 1 July 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in The Journal of General Psychology
- Vol. 124 (3) , 229-339
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00221309709595520
Abstract
Data from a fundamental cognitive task in which participants discriminate the relative frequency of visual or auditory binary stimuli were examined. Accuracy on this task correlates well with psychometric intelligence. The experimental paradigm is highly tractable, lending itself to rigorous analyses of precisely defined simulation models. Numerous models are evaluated, using multiple comparisons between response patterns of individual (and pooled) participants and predictive measures based on simulations for each trial sequence. Implications for theoretical accounts of short-term memory, discrimination, and absolute judgment, as well as the measurement of individual differences in cognitive ability, are discussed. The results suggest a reinterpretation of memory capacity and support a new kind of model (with a single estimable parameter) in which discrete, valued units of information are stochastically displaced by further input.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Intelligence and visual and auditory discrimination: Evidence that the relationship is not due to the rate at which sensory information is sampledIntelligence, 1995
- Seven plus or minus two: A commentary on capacity limitations.Psychological Review, 1994
- The mental representation of parity and number magnitude.Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 1993
- Providing a sensory basis for models of visual information acquisitionPerception & Psychophysics, 1993
- Short-term memory: Where do we stand?Memory & Cognition, 1993
- Individual differences in working memory and comprehension: A test of four hypotheses.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 1992
- Modeling evidence accumulation with partial loss in expanded judgment.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 1989
- A bilingual word‐length effect: Implications for intelligence testing and the relative ease of mental calculation in Welsh and EnglishBritish Journal of Psychology, 1980
- How Big Is a Chunk?Science, 1974
- Perceptual Indices of Performance: The Measurement of ‘Inspection Time’ and ‘Noise’ in the Visual SystemPerception, 1972