Abstract

Event-related potential (ERP) correlates of the serial position effect in short-term memory were investigated using a memory scanning task. Nine normal young adults (18–39 years) indicated whether a probe item was a member of a previously presented 5-item memory set by pressing 1 of 2 reaction-time buttons. Three types of stimuli were used: verbal digits presented both auditorily and visually, and musical notes presented auditorily. The ERPs to the probes were separately averaged according to the serial position of the probe (1, 2, 3, 4, or 5) in the memory set. The ERPs to the memory set items in positions 1, 3 and 5 also were separately averaged. Both baseline-to-peak and average amplitudes of a late positive parietal potential to the probes were larger to probe items presented in the last position in the memory set than to probes presented in the middle positions (2, 3 and 4), showing a significant recency effect, but only for auditory digits. Reaction time reflected significant recency effects for both auditory digits and notes, but not for visual digits. Response accuracy (percent correct) showed a significant recency effect only for notes. For each stimulus type, both the baseline-to-peak and average amplitudes of a late frontal component to the memory set items became more negative (in the case of the visual digits, less positive) in the third and last serial position of the memory set compared to the first. These findings provide electrophysiological evidence of serial position effects in short-term memory, which, during memory scanning, are dependent on stimulus modality (auditory, visual) and type (verbal, non-verbal).

Highlights

  • Probe items The findings of this study showed that serial position effects were reflected in measures of both ERPs and RTs to the probe items during memory scanning

  • Significant recency effects were observed for RT and for the amplitudes of a late parietal positivity to digits presented in the auditory but not in the visual modality

  • The findings of our study suggest that serial position effects observed in the behavioral response can be detected earlier, at the level of stimulus evaluation as reflected in a late positive parietal component of the ERP

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Summary

A DONIS 0013464991000990

Event-related potential correlates of the serial position effect in short-term memory. Recognition or recall for items presented in the last portion of a list is better for anditory than for visual presentations, indicating that the recency effect is modality dependent (Murdock 1968; Craik 1969; Murdock and Walker 1969; Kirsner and Craik 1971; Burrows 1972; Watkins and Watkins 1977; Drewnowski and Murdock 1980; Crowder 1986: Roberts 1986) This finding has been given as support for the hypothesis that short-term memory is primarily acoustic or phonological in nature (Conrad 1964; Wickelgren 1965; Laughery and Fell 1969; Sperling and Spielman 1970; Spoehr and Corin 1978; Shand and Klima 1981; Salam and Baddeley 1982; Greene 1986; Roberts 1986). The results will bear on whether differential processing of the memory set items occurs as a function of their position in the list

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