The widely used Baddeley and Hitch model of working memory (Baddeley & Hitch, 1974; see also Baddeley, 1986) proposed analogical forms of representation for verbal and visuospatial information that can be broadly defined as sensorimotor.
Researchers have created alternative models that avoid using either sensory coding, motoric coding, or both as a result of problems with the model of verbal working memory in particular.
This study examines the evidence for sensorimotor coding in working memory, including evidence from sign language research and neuropsychology, as well as from standard working memory paradigms, and comes to the conclusion that only a sensorimotor model can account for the wide range of effects that characterize verbal working memory.
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