Sensory Short-term memory
 
 
- Actually, we never hear a word all at once either, or for that matter, not even a phoneme.  What we actually hear is a sustained crackling noise. 
- It takes a battery of short-term memory processes to achieve recognition. This first of these processes in the battery is what I would call Sensory Short memory. 
- The auditory modality in particular includes a process, which provides an experience analogous to the afterglow
- of the blips on a radar screen. This process holds on to the blips long enough (in milliseconds) to show relationships.  Similarly patterns of overtones can be discerned through Sensory Short-term memory.  
- Hence, we can recognize phonemes as if we heard them in their entirety.  Here, in the Notes, are other descriptions of sensory memory:
 NOTES:  More information on Sensory Short-term Memory 
 NOTES:  Yet more information on Sensory-Short-term Memory.