Abstract: Author summary What makes short-term memory so poor, that over a minute we tend to forget even phone numbers, if we cannot rehearse or record them electronically? In comparison, long-term memory can be amazingly rich and accurate. Was it so difficult to equip our brain with a short-term memory device of reasonable capacity? We discuss the hypothesis that instead of an ad hoc device, short-term memory relies on long-term representations, and that the short-term recall of multiple items exploits the natural tendency of the cortex to jump from state to state, by only adding imprecisely determined “kicks” that spur cortical dynamics towards the states representing those items. We show that a plausible neural model for such kicks performs similarly to human subjects we have tested, both in conditions when short-term recall is terminated by errors, and when errors are overlooked and subjects are asked to keep trying. The same mechanism can drive serial recall, if combined with equally imprecise kicks encoding item order. Our analysis suggests that a proper short-term memory device may have never evolved in our brain, which had, therefore, to make do with tweaking its superb long-term memory capabilities.
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