phonological
Examples of phonological in the following topics:
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Short-Term and Working Memory
- The phonological loop is responsible for dealing with auditory and verbal information, such as phone numbers, people's names, or general understanding of what other people are talking about.
- It consists of two parts: a short-term phonological store with auditory memory traces that are subject to rapid decay, and an articulatory loop that can revive these memory traces.
- The phonological store can only store sounds for about two seconds without rehearsal, but the auditory loop can "replay them" internally to keep them in working memory.
- The phonological loop and visuospatial sketchpad are semi-independent systems; because of this, you can increase the amount you can remember by engaging both systems at once.
- The central executive connects the phonological loop and the visuospatial sketchpad and coordinates their activities.
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Other Steps
- This is aided by what is known as the phonological loop of working memory.
- The phonological loop consists of two parts - short-term storage and articulatory rehearsal.
- Diagram of the phonological loop process, which consists of two parts: short-term storage and articulacy rehearsal.
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Introduction to Language
- Phonetics is the study of individual speech sounds; phonology is the study of phonemes, which are the speech sounds of an individual language.
- These include phonetics, phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, and pragmatics.
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Learning Disabilities and Special Education
- This includes difficulty with phonological awareness, phonological decoding, processing speed, auditory short-term memory, and/or language skills or verbal comprehension.
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Introduction to Memory Encoding
- This is aided by what is known as the phonological loop.
- The phonological loop is a process by which sounds are sub-vocally rehearsed (or "said in your mind over and over") in order to be remembered.
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The Structure of Language
- A phoneme is the basic unit of phonology.
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Introduction to Memory Storage
- Miller suggested that the capacity of short-term memory storage is approximately seven items plus or minus two, but modern researchers are showing that this can vary depending on variables like the stored items' phonological properties.