000 01590nab a2200253 a 4500
005 20210219162352.0
008 991125s1985 mx 000 0 spa u
035 _aUPN01000202803
049 _aART
100 1 _aCarruthers, Peter
100 1 _upcarruth@umd.edu
222 0 _aLUDUS VITALIS : REVISTA DE FILOSOFIA DE LAS CIENCIAS DE LA VIDA
245 0 3 _aLa evolución de la memoria de trabajo
260 _aMéxico
300 _a99-124
362 0 _a2013 Volumen 21, número 40
520 _aWorking memory (WM) is fundamental to many aspects of human life, including learning, speech and text comprehension, prospection and future planning, and explicit “system 2" forms of reasoning, as well as overlapping heavily with fluid general intelligence. WM has been intensively studied for many decades, and there is a growing consensus about its nature, its components, and its signature limits. Remarkably, given its central importance in human life, there has been very little comparative investigation of WM abilities across species. Consequently, much remains unknown about the evolution of this important human capacity. Some questions can be tentatively answered from the existing comparative literature. Even studies that were not intended to do so can nonetheless shed light on the WM capacities of nonhuman animals. However, many questions remain
653 0 _aMEMORIA DE TRABAJO
653 0 _aATENCION
653 0 _aMENTE
653 0 _aCEREBRO
856 4 _uhttp://www.centrolombardo.edu.mx/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/40-07_carruthers.pdf
905 _aArticulo
999 _c174904
_d174904