Prof. WEN Zhisheng, EdwardEdwardProf. WEN Zhisheng2023-04-212023-04-212014Language Teaching, 2014, vol.47(2), pp.174-190.0261-44481475-3049http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11861/7775Working memory (WM) generally refers to the human ability to temporarily maintain and manipulate a limited amount of information in immediate consciousness when carrying out complex cognitive tasks such as problem-solving and language comprehension. Though much controversy has surrounded the WM concept since its inception by Baddeley & Hitch (1974), an increasing number of cognitive psychologists have accepted WM as a multi-component system comprising both domain-specific storage mechanisms and domain-general executive functions (Miyake & Shah 1999; Baddeley 2012; Williams 2012). Such a FRACTIONATED view of this cognitive construct manifests itself clearly in distinct strands of WM-language research, where two contrasting research paradigms have emerged (Wen 2012).enTheorizing and measuring working memory in first and second language researchPeer Reviewed Journal Article10.1017/S0261444813000517