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Michael S. Humphreys

Researcher at University of Queensland

Publications -  144
Citations -  7589

Michael S. Humphreys is an academic researcher from University of Queensland. The author has contributed to research in topics: Recall & Episodic memory. The author has an hindex of 36, co-authored 142 publications receiving 7253 citations. Previous affiliations of Michael S. Humphreys include Northwestern University.

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Internalizing versus externalizing control: Different ways to perform a time-based prospective memory task

TL;DR: It is concluded that much of the need for internal control can be transferred to the external world by performing a well-practiced task such as clock checking, which reminds participants of the PM task and reduces the internal control required to maintain the intention to perform thePM task.
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Temporal contexts: Filling the gap between episodic memory and associative learning

TL;DR: An integrated approach to theories of temporal contexts developed in the memory tradition is proposed, which shows that participants spontaneously create temporal contexts in the absence of explicit instructions and the memory of a retrieved temporal context can be updated with information from the current situation that does not fit well with the retrieved memory.
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Experimental manipulation of prior experience: Effects on item and associative recognition.

TL;DR: Results showed that prior familiaris ation improved associative recognition of very low- frequencies pairs, but had no effect on high-frequency pairs.
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Dual processes in recognition: Does a focus on measurement operations provide a sufficient foundation?

TL;DR: It is shown that there are alternative processes that would produce a rough invariance in familiarity and that the process dissociation procedure does not have the power to differentiate between these alternative possibilities.
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A naturalistic study of the word frequency effect in episodic recognition.

TL;DR: The ratings data showed that subjective experience rather than background word frequency was the better predictor of recognition accuracy.