# Short-term memory
> [!overview]
> parent:: [[Memory]]
> related:: [[Memory, working]]
#seed This note is still growing.
Short-term storage has a limited capacity, and receives the processed [[Memory, sensory|sensory]] information and data from [[Memory, long-term|long-term memory]], and can send information to [[Memory, long-term|long-term memory]].[^1] The term “[[Memory, working|working memory]]” is often used interchangeably with short-term memory, but they are conceptually different.[^2]
---
# # Atkinson and Shriffin modal model (1968)
![[memoryAtkinsonShriffinModel.svg]]
%%Atkinson and Shriffin (1968) has shared similarities with the Broadbent model (1958)%%
### Criticisms of the Atkinson and Shriffin modal model
### New models introduced to address criticisms[^3]
- **Craik and Lockhart (1972)**
- Envisions memory not as a process, but a series of storage
- The commonly accepted model today
- Baddeley and Hitch (1974)
- Cowan (1988, 1995, 1999)
- Goldman-Rakic (1995)
> [!cite]- Reference
> ```dataview
> TABLE WITHOUT ID
> link(file.path, title) AS "Title",
> type AS "Type",
> keywords AS "Keywords"
> FROM "50 Reference"
> WHERE contains(keywords, this.file.link)
> SORT type, title asc
> ```
[^1]: [[camina2017NeuroanatomicalNeurophysiologicalPsychological|Camina, E., & Güell, F. (2017). The Neuroanatomical, Neurophysiological and Psychological Basis of Memory: Current Models and Their Origins.]]
[^2]: [[aben2012DistinctionWorkingMemory|Aben, B., Stapert, S., & Blokland, A. (2012). About the Distinction between Working Memory and Short-Term Memory.]]
[^3]: [[camina2017NeuroanatomicalNeurophysiologicalPsychological|Camina, E., & Güell, F. (2017). The Neuroanatomical, Neurophysiological and Psychological Basis of Memory: Current Models and Their Origins.]]