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  1. Forgetting in immediate serial recall: Decay, temporal distinctiveness, or interference?Klaus Oberauer & Stephan Lewandowsky - 2008 - Psychological Review 115 (3):544-576.
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  • Oscillator-based memory for serial order.Gordon D. A. Brown, Tim Preece & Charles Hulme - 2000 - Psychological Review 107 (1):127-181.
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  • A production system theory of serial memory.John R. Anderson & Michael Matessa - 1997 - Psychological Review 104 (4):728-748.
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  • The episodic buffer: a new component of working memory?Alan Baddeley - 2000 - Trends in Cognitive Sciences 4 (11):417-423.
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  • The magical number 4 in short-term memory: A reconsideration of mental storage capacity.Nelson Cowan - 2001 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 24 (1):87-114.
    Miller (1956) summarized evidence that people can remember about seven chunks in short-term memory (STM) tasks. However, that number was meant more as a rough estimate and a rhetorical device than as a real capacity limit. Others have since suggested that there is a more precise capacity limit, but that it is only three to five chunks. The present target article brings together a wide variety of data on capacity limits suggesting that the smaller capacity limit is real. Capacity limits (...)
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  • The primacy model: A new model of immediate serial recall.Michael P. A. Page & Dennis Norris - 1998 - Psychological Review 105 (4):761-781.
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  • Memory for serial order: A network model of the phonological loop and its timing.Neil Burgess & Graham J. Hitch - 1999 - Psychological Review 106 (3):551-581.
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