DocumentCode
750884
Title
Magical numbers: the seven-plus-or-minus-two myth
Author
Doumont, Jean-luc
Author_Institution
JL Consulting, Kraainem, Belgium
Volume
45
Issue
2
fYear
2002
fDate
6/1/2002 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
123
Lastpage
127
Abstract
Ask any specialist of professional communication how many items we can hold in short-term memory: almost certainly, he or she will answer seven (possibly, seven plus or minus two). Ask that person where this answer comes from: very likely, he or she will refer to an article published almost fifty years ago in Psychological Review (G.A. Miller, 1956). Equally likely, however, he or she will never have read this article and will happily go on quoting it out of context. The article denounces the seven-plus-or-minus-two myth. It first reviews George Miller´s original paper, placing the limit of seven in a proper perspective and drawing other, possibly more useful lessons from the research presented. Next, it explores the guiding value of integers below seven and proposes other, equally magical, but more pragmatic limits for effective professional communication
Keywords
human factors; professional communication; psychology; attention span; chunking; guiding value; magical number; professional communication; seven-plus-or-minus-two myth; short-term memory; Context; Frequency; Pregnancy; Professional communication; Psychology; Snow; Testing;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Professional Communication, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0361-1434
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TPC.2002.1003695
Filename
1003695
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