Whatever the cause(s) of short-term forgetting, consensus asserts that it limits the amount of retained new information short term. This limit is referred to as the finite capacity of short-term memory. Short-term memory capacity is often called
memory span, in reference to a common measurement procedure. In a memory span test, the experimenter presents a list of items (e.g. digits or words) of increasing length. An individual's span is determined as the longest list length that he or she can recall correctly in the given order on half or more trials. In an early and influential article, "
The Magical Number Seven, Plus or Minus Two",
Miller suggested that human short-term memory has a forward memory span of approximately seven plus or minus two items and that that was well known at the time (apparently originating with Wundt). Later research reported that this "magical number seven" is roughly accurate for college students recalling lists of digits, but memory span varies widely across populations and material. For example, the ability to recall words in order depends on characteristics of those words: fewer words can be recalled when the words have longer spoken duration; this is known as the
word-length effect, or when their speech sounds are similar to each other; this is called the
phonological similarity effect. More words can be recalled when the words are highly familiar or occur frequently in speech. Recall performance is better when all of the words are taken from a single semantic category (such as games) than when the words are chosen randomly. A later estimate of short-term memory capacity reported that the capacity was about four pieces, or "chunks", of information. In the visual domain, several studies report no fixed capacity limit in terms of total number of items that can be retained. Instead, some investigators have argued for a limited resource that can be flexibly shared between items held in short-term memory, with some items (in the focus of attention) being allocated more resource and being recalled with greater fidelity.
As a Measure of Intelligence According to a model by the physicist
Helmar Frank, short-term memory capacity is the actual physical measure of individual differences in intelligence. The capacity C of the "working memory" of human
short term memory (measured in
bits) is the product of the
information processing speed S (in bits per
second) and the
memory span D in seconds: C [bits] = S [bits/s] ⋅ D [s] While the intelligence quotient (
IQ) is a relative measure based on the
median of a particular population, short-term memory capacity has the advantage of being an absolute measure. Helmar Frank, who published his first book on this topic in 1962, was tasked in his dissertation with exploring how much information a person can actually absorb and mentally process during a complex artistic performance, such as a stage set, and how much simply passes by. Frank conceived the idea of understanding the processing capacity of the human mind, as well as its capacity to learn, as a
channel capacity, analogous to
Claude Shannon's theory. This led him to define short-term memory capacity. Building on this theoretical foundation, the psychologist
Siegfried Lehrl developed the Short Test of General Intelligence, later renamed the Short Test for General Basic Quantities of Information Processing (KAI), which measures information processing speed as reading speed. In standardized tests, individuals with an IQ of 130 have a short-term memory capacity of 140 bits, those with an IQ of 112 have 105 bits, and those with an IQ of 94 have 70 bits. Such data reveal that, unlike IQ, short-term memory capacity is not normalized to a Gaussian distribution. Instead, it exhibits a
log-normal distribution.
Rehearsal Rehearsal is the process of repeating information to be retained, ostensibly keeping it in short-term memory. Each repetition reenters the information into short-term memory, thus keeping that information for another 10 to 20 seconds (the average storage time for short-term memory). This process allows information to be stored in the memory avoiding distracting stimuli, rehearsal allows new information to be strengthened which results in a likelihood of this information being stored in the long-term memory However, the success of rehearsal can depend on factors such as attention as well as any form of distraction that is present because of this active rehearsal is essential to store that new information.
Chunking Chunking is a technique that allows memory to remember more things. Chunking involves organizing material into meaningful groups. Chunking can greatly increase recall capacity. For example, in recalling a phone number, chunking the digits into three groups (area code, prefix, and extension). This method of remembering phone numbers is far more effective than attempting to remember a sequence of 10 digits. Practice and the usage of existing information in long-term memory can lead to additional improvements in chunking. In one testing session, an American cross-country runner was able to recall a string of 79 digits after hearing them only once by chunking them into groups the size of a running time.
Factors Diseases that cause
neurodegeneration, such as
Alzheimer's disease, can damage short-term as well as long-term memory. Damage to certain sections of the brain due to this disease causes a shrinkage in the cerebral cortex, which impairs the ability to think and recall. Short-term memory performance is influenced by diet. More intake of blueberries was reported to improve short-term memory after continuous use whereas alcohol decreases short-term memory performance. == Conditions ==