William B. Huber, Sung-Hyuk Cha, et al.
IWFHR 2004
To examine the claim that phonetic coding plays a special role in temporal order recall, deaf and hearing college students were tested on their recall of temporal and spatial order information at two delay intervals. The deaf subjects were all native signers of American Sign Language. The results indicated that both the deaf and hearing subjects used phonetic coding in short-term temporal recall, and visual coding in spatial recall. There was no evidence of manual or visual coding among either the hearing or the deaf subjects in the temporal order recall task. The use of phonetic coding for temporal recall is consistent with the hypothesis that recall of temporal order information is facilitated by a phonetic code. © 1990 Psychonomic Society, Inc.
William B. Huber, Sung-Hyuk Cha, et al.
IWFHR 2004
Shari M. Trewin, Mark R. Laff, et al.
CHI 2008
Vicki L. Hanson, John T. Richards
ACM Transactions on the Web
Vicki L. Hanson, Elizabeth W. Goodell, et al.
Journal of Memory and Language