Recall of a random row of a 12x12 grid flashed for 1/120th of a second was 75%, suggesting all the rows were stored in sensory register but forgotten too quickly
Immediate recall was worse for acoustically similar words and recall after 20 minutes was worse for semantically similar words, suggesting short-term memory is coded acoustically and long-term memory is coded semantically
Cognitive tests of memory like the multistore model are often highly artificial, low in mundane realism, and conducted in lab environments, so findings may not generalize to real-world memory use
Generalizing findings from idiographic case studies to explain memory in the wider population is problematic due to potential unique issues in the individual
Performing two visual tasks or a visual and verbal task simultaneously is better when they use separate processing subsystems, suggesting the phonological loop and visuospatial sketchpad are separate
Brain injury patient KF had selective impairment to verbal short-term memory but not visual functioning, suggesting the subsystems are separate processes in the brain
Participants could recall more monosyllabic words than polysyllabic words, suggesting the capacity of the phonological loop is limited by the time it takes to say the words (word length effect)
The working memory model seems more accurate than the short-term memory component of the multistore model in describing active memory processing, so psychologists now often refer to working memory instead
Issues with external validity of memory studies due to lack of mundane realism and artificial tasks, so findings may not generalize to real-world memory use