AD Baddeley’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Working memory WM
  • Literature Review

January 1992

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151 Reads

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4,662 Citations

Science

AD Baddeley

The term working memory refers to a brain system that provides temporary storage and manipulation of the information necessary for such complex cognitive tasks as language comprehension, learning, and reasoning. This definition has evolved from the concept of a unitary short-term memory system. Working memory has been found to require the simultaneous storage and processing of information. It can be divided into the following three subcomponents: (i) the central executive, which is assumed to be an attentional-controlling system, is important in skills such as chess playing and is particularly susceptible to the effects of Alzheimer's disease; and two slave systems, namely (ii) the visuospatial sketch pad, which manipulates visual images and (iii) the phonological loop, which stores and rehearses speech-based information and is necessary for the acquisition of both native and second-language vocabulary.

Citations (1)


... For example, the sentence "AI is transforming jobs" may break into tokens such as "AI," " is," " transform," "ing," and " jobs," depending on the tokenizer and the specific model being used. Humans can process about 5,000 to 20,000 tokens per hour, limited by cognitive and physical constraints [5], [6]. AI, however, can process millions of tokens at the same time, making it highly efficient for tasks like drafting documents or analyzing data. ...

Reference:

Exponential Shift: Humans Adapt to AI Economies
Working memory WM
  • Citing Article
  • January 1992

Science