Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
917976 Journal of Experimental Child Psychology 2015 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

•This paper demonstrates infant short-term memory (STM) for sequences of tones.•10-month-old infants can encode 2-, but not 4-tone sequences in STM.•The number of tones an infant can remember may depend on the duration of the tones.•Infant STM capacity estimates are similar across auditory and visual modalities.

This research explores auditory short-term memory (STM) capacity for non-linguistic sounds in 10-month-old infants. Infants were presented with auditory streams composed of repeating sequences of either 2 or 4 unique instruments (e.g., flute, piano, cello; 350 or 700 ms in duration) followed by a 500-ms retention interval. These instrument sequences either stayed the same for every repetition (Constant) or changed by 1 instrument per sequence (Varying). Using the head-turn preference procedure, infant listening durations were recorded for each stream type (2- or 4-instrument sequences composed of 350- or 700-ms notes). Preference for the Varying stream was taken as evidence of auditory STM because detection of the novel instrument required memory for all of the instruments in a given sequence. Results demonstrate that infants listened longer to Varying streams for 2-instrument sequences, but not 4-instrument sequences, composed of 350-ms notes (Experiment 1), although this effect did not hold when note durations were increased to 700 ms (Experiment 2). Experiment 3 replicates and extends results from Experiments 1 and 2 and provides support for a duration account of capacity limits in infant auditory STM.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Developmental and Educational Psychology
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