Tämä poistaa sivun "In Psychology and Neuroscience". Varmista että haluat todella tehdä tämän.
In psychology and neuroscience, memory span is the longest list of objects that an individual can repeat back in right order instantly after presentation on 50% of all trials. Items could include words, numbers, or letters. The duty is called digit span when numbers are used. Memory span is a common measure of working memory and quick-time period memory. It is usually a element of cognitive means checks such as the Wechsler Grownup Intelligence Scale (WAIS). Backward memory span is a more difficult variation which involves recalling items in reverse order. Functionally, memory span is used to measure the number of discrete items over which the individual can successively distribute his attention and nonetheless manage them right into a working unit. To generalize, it refers to the power of a person to reproduce immediately, after one presentation, a series of discrete stimuli in their authentic order. Experiments in memory span have found that the extra acquainted a person is with the kind of material introduced to them, the more they will remember it in a novel setting.
For instance, an individual will better remember a sequence of their first-language than their second-language
Tämä poistaa sivun "In Psychology and Neuroscience". Varmista että haluat todella tehdä tämän.