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  1.  Study 2 - Shallice and Warrington (1970) - Case Study of K  KF suffered brain damage as a result of a motorcycle accident KF had no problem with long-term memory, but his digit span was only two items (in others words he could only remember two digits at a time whereas, on average, people remember seven digits in short-term memory).

  2. T Shallice, E K Warrington. PMID: 4437753 DOI: 10.1016/0028-3932(74)90087-6 No abstract available. Publication types Comparative Study MeSH terms Acoustic Stimulation Adult Auditory Perception* ...

  3. cas K.F. Définition (s) Patient décrit par Shallice & Warrington (1969 ; 1970) qui, après un traumatisme crânien, présentait un trouble de la mémoire à court terme (empan de chiffres réduit, pas d’effet de récence), mais une mémoire à long terme préservée. Concept (s) générique (s) patient. Concept (s) associé (s) effet de ...

  4. 17 de may. de 2017 · Short-term memory patients. Certain aspects of the normal multi-component cognitive model of the phonological loop were initially obtained by inference from observations in brain damaged patients with selective impairment of verbal short-term memory (Warrington and Shallice, 1969; Warrington et al., 1971; Vallar and Baddeley, 1984; Shallice and Vallar, 1990; Waters et al., 1992; Vallar et al ...

  5. Elizabeth Kerr Warrington FRS ... In a test administered by Warrington and Tim Shallice from University College London, the short-term memory of a patient who had head trauma following a motorcycle accident was tested. Although the patient displayed a digit span of one ...

  6. 1 de ene. de 1974 · There is a double dissociation between short-term retention of speech sounds and non-verbal sounds. Two STM patients (Shallice & Warrington, 1974) could not retain strings of verbal items, but were unimpaired with meaningful sounds (like a whistle, etc.). As far as we know, no other STM patients were tested on non-verbal sound STM.

  7. 1 de jul. de 1998 · JBR, a classic case of a category-specific disorder for living things reported by Warrington and Shallice (Brain 1984; 107: 829-54), was reassessed to establish whether differences in concept ...