Evidence showing that non-verbal short-term memory has distinct visual and
spatial/sequential components is reviewed. A new test, The Visual Patterns
Test (VPT), which was designed to measure short-term visual memory largely
shorn of its spatio-sequential component, is described. Correlational studi
es of the VPT and the Corsi Blocks Test with healthy subjects and brain-dam
aged patients indicate a separation between visual and sequential abilities
. This separation of function is supported by double dissociations shown by
patients. Moreover, in a selective interference experiment, the VPT and th
e Corsi tests were found to show a double dissociation pattern of interfere
nce from visual and spatio-sequential subsidiary tasks, respectively. The p
resent results are discussed in relation to other findings in the literatur
e, and it is concluded that non-verbal short-term memory can indeed be view
ed as comprising distinct Visual and spatio-sequential components. The VPT
will be a useful neuropsychological instrument for measuring the visual com
ponent. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.