Answer:
B. short-term memory serves as an intermediate store between sensory memory and long-term memory.
Explanation:
The Atikinson & Shiffrin (1968) view of memory is based on a computer metaphor of the mind -- although its roots go back to William James (1890). The model is defined below:
1. Incoming sensory information is initially held in the sensory registers.
2. By means of attention, some information is transferred to short-term memory.
3. Information is maintained in short-term memory by means of rehearsal. If the information in short-term memory receives enough rehearsal, it is copied into long-term memory by means of certain encoding processes.
4. Information can be transferred from long-term memory back to short term memory by means of certain retrieval processes.
5. Information in long-term memory is also used to support pattern-recognition processes in the sensory registers.