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The Time-Based Resource-Sharing Model of Working Memory

Pierre Barrouillet, Valérie Camos

2020Oxford University Press eBooks61 citationsDOI

Abstract

The time-based resource-sharing model considers working memory as the workspace in which mental representations are built, maintained, and transformed for completing goal-oriented tasks. Its main component is made of an episodic buffer and a procedural system that form an executive loop in which processing and storage share domain-general attentional resources on a temporal basis. Because working memory representations decay with time when attention is diverted, the cognitive load of a given activity is the proportion of time during which it occupies attention and prevents it from counteracting this decay through attentional refreshing. Consequently, recall in working memory tasks is an inverse function of the cognitive load of concurrent processing. Besides this system, an independent domain-specific maintenance system exists for verbal, but not visuospatial, information. Within this framework, working memory development mainly results from increasing processing speed that affects both the duration of the distraction of attention by concurrent tasks and refreshing efficiency.

Topics & Concepts

Working memoryBaddeley's model of working memoryDistractionComputer scienceCognitive psychologyRecallCognitionWorkspaceCognitive loadDuration (music)PsychologyShort-term memoryArtificial intelligenceArtNeuroscienceLiteratureRobotCognitive Science and Mapping
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