Here's what I got out of the article:
    According to Miller, the Magical Number 7 only applies to 
one - dimensional objects, probably because they only have 
one variable aspect, as opposed to things such as faces which 
have several variables. Therefore we can recognize 
thousands of different faces.
    
    Experiments be Klemmer & Frick, and Beebe-Centre, Rogers 
& O'Connell have shown that two - dimensional objects, such 
as a point in a square, have two capacities, in this case one 
for horizontal and one for vertical position. If the capacity 
for one of those dimensions is 3.25 bits, then it would be 
expected that the two together would equal 6.5, but in fact 
the addition of the second capacity only gives us 4.6 bits, 
so it is not perfect when a second dimension is taken into 
account.
    However, two - dimensional objects are still a long way 
from faces. Pollack & Ficks conducted an experiment in which 
noises were presented with 6 variable qualities - frequency, 
intensity, rate of interruption, on-time fraction, total 
duration and spatial location. There were 5 values for each 
variable, so in total there were 56, or 15,625 (?) different 
tones. The information was transmitted at 7.2 bits, and 
participants could identify up to 150 different categories. 
This greatly exceeds the Magical Number 7, plus or minus 2.
    It is interesting to note that the variables do not have 
to be independent of each other to increase the channel 
capacity. Basically, increasing the amount of variables 
increases channel capacity, but actually decreases accuracy.
    Miller argues that in evolutionary terms, humans have 
survived and evolved because they have a little bit of 
information about lots of things, rather than vice versa, and 
this would seem to be preferable.
    As far as speech is concerned, Pollack & Ficks did a test 
where tonal stimuli had 8 variables, but each was only 
binary, ie. it had only two different values. About 120 
different recognizable sounds were identified. With human 
speech, it is not yet known whether the limit in the number 
of variables we have is due to a limit in processing them or 
in producing them.
    The summary of this section that Miller gives is that 
people become less accurate at identifying stimuli when they 
have to judge several variables at once.
    
I hope this hasn't confused anyone too much! See you at 3:30,
SAM
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