scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Encoding specificity and retrieval processes in episodic memory.

TLDR
This paper describes and evaluates explanations offered by these theories to account for the effect of extralist cuing, facilitation of recall of list items by nonlist items.
Abstract
Recent changes in prctheorclical orientation toward problems of human memory have brought with them a concern with retrieval processes, and a number of early versions of theories of retrieval have been constructed. This paper describes and evaluates explanations offered by these theories to account for the effect of extralist cuing, facilitation of recall of list items by nonlist items. Experiments designed to test the currently most popular theory of retrieval, the generation-recognition theory, yielded results incompatible not only with generation-recognition models, but most other theories as well: under certain conditions subjects consistently failed to recognize many recallable list words. Several tentative explanations of this phenomenon of recognition failure were subsumed under the encoding specificity principle according to which the memory trace of an event and hence the properties of effective retrieval cue are determined by the specific encoding operations performed by the system on the input stimuli.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

From the Lab to the Police Station A Successful Application of Eyewitness Research

TL;DR: The authors describe how eyewitness researchers shaped understanding of eyewitness evidence issues over a long period of time through research and theory on system variables.
Journal ArticleDOI

Patterns of memory loss in three elderly samples.

TL;DR: Three groups of people ranging in age from 64 to 88 years performed tasks of word generation, paired-associate recall, and free and cued recall, finding that whereas there were age-related differences in some tests, these age differences were strongly modulated by characteristics of the participants and characteristics ofThe tasks.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Dorsolateral Prefrontal Cortex Contributes to Successful Relational Memory Encoding

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to test the hypothesis by examining brain activity during sequential encoding of unrelated word pairs, where subjects either made a semantic judgment specific to the target word ("item-specific" trials) or a comparison between the target words and the first word in the pair ("relational" trials).
Journal ArticleDOI

When encoding yields remembering: insights from event-related neuroimaging.

TL;DR: It is hoped that the integration of findings from ERP studies, which offer higher temporal resolution, with those from event-related fMRI studies, who offer higher spatial resolution, will shed new light on when and why encoding yields subsequent remembering.
Book ChapterDOI

Chapter Five Cognition and Aging: A Theory of New Learning and the Use of Old Connections

TL;DR: A detailed theory of perception, production and memory for language and applies it to the problem of cognitive decline in old age was shown to account for a wide range of established age differences in cognitive ability, and to suggest an alternative framework for understanding some findings which in the past have seemed contradictory.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Levels of processing: A framework for memory research

TL;DR: This paper reviewed the evidence for multistore theories of memory and pointed out some difficulties with the approach and proposed an alternative framework for human memory research in terms of depth or levels of processing.
Book ChapterDOI

Human memory ; A proposed system and its control processes

TL;DR: This chapter presents a general theoretical framework of human memory and describes the results of a number of experiments designed to test specific models that can be derived from the overall theory.

Remembering. A Study in Experimental and Social Psychology, Cambridge (University Press) 1964.

TL;DR: In this paper, the notion of a collective unconscious was introduced as a theory of remembering in social psychology, and a study of remembering as a study in Social Psychology was carried out.