Journal ArticleDOI
Response deadline and subjective awareness in recognition memory.
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
The results imply that knowing does not index an automatic familiarity process, as conceived in some dual-process models of recognition, and that both remembering and knowing increase with the slower, more controlled processing permitted by the longer response time.About:
This article is published in Consciousness and Cognition.The article was published on 1999-12-01. It has received 57 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Levels-of-processing effect.read more
Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
The Nature of Recollection and Familiarity: A Review of 30 Years of Research
TL;DR: For instance, the authors found that recall is more sensitive than familiarity to response speeding, division of attention, generation, semantic encoding, the effects of aging, and the amnestic effects of benzodiazepines, while familiarity is less sensitive to shifts in response criterion, fluency manipulations, forgetting over short retention intervals, and some perceptual manipulations.
Book ChapterDOI
Remembering and knowing
TL;DR: For instance, remembering and knowing are two states of awareness that entail conscious recollection or feelings of familiarity in the absence of any recollective experiences as mentioned in this paper, and they also have distinct neural correlates.
Journal ArticleDOI
Episodic memory and autonoetic consciousness: a first–person approach
TL;DR: A recently developed approach to episodic memory makes use of 'first-person' reports of remembering and knowing, which represents one way in which that most elusive aspect of consciousness, its subjectivity, can be investigated scientifically.
Journal ArticleDOI
Sum-difference theory of remembering and knowing: a two-dimensional signal-detection model.
TL;DR: A one-dimensional model postulates that remember responses are just high-confidence old judgments, but a meta-analysis of 373 experiments shows that the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves predicted by this model have the wrong slope.
Journal ArticleDOI
Recognition memory and decision processes: a meta-analysis of remember, know, and guess responses.
TL;DR: A meta-analysis of proportions of remember, know, and guess responses was carried out on observations from 86 experimental conditions in 23 different recognition memory experiments, finding that it was guessing, rather than knowing, that was most strongly correlated with overall response criteria.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
A process dissociation framework: Separating automatic from intentional uses of memory
TL;DR: In this article, a process dissociation procedure is proposed to separate the contributions of different types of processes to performance of a task, rather than equating processes with tasks, by separating automatic from intentional forms of processing.
Journal ArticleDOI
The role of decision processes in remembering and knowing
TL;DR: A meta-analysis of published data and a simple experiment tested predictions from the decision process analysis of remember/know responses.
Book ChapterDOI
Remembering and knowing
TL;DR: For instance, remembering and knowing are two states of awareness that entail conscious recollection or feelings of familiarity in the absence of any recollective experiences as mentioned in this paper, and they also have distinct neural correlates.
Journal ArticleDOI
Experiences of Remembering, Knowing, and Guessing☆
TL;DR: The authors presented and discussed transcripts of some 270 explanations subjects provided subsequently for recognition memory decisions that had been associated with remember, know, or guess responses at the time the recognition decisions were made.