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Murphy, Gregory L.; Hampton, James A.; Milovanovic, Goran S. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2012
Four experiments investigated the classic issue in semantic memory of whether people organize categorical information in hierarchies and use inference to retrieve information from them, as proposed by Collins and Quillian (1969). Past evidence has focused on RT to confirm sentences such as "All birds are animals" or "Canaries breathe." However,…
Descriptors: Semantics, Memory, Classification, Inferences
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Brown, Aaron A.; Bodner, Glen E. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2011
When participants must classify their recognition experiences as remembering or knowing, variables often have dissociative effects on the two judgments. In contrast, when participants independently rate recollection "and" familiarity only parallel effects have been reported. To investigate this discrepancy we compared the effects of masked priming…
Descriptors: Recognition (Psychology), Classification, Memory, Knowledge Level
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Kornell, Nate; Bjork, Robert A.; Garcia, Michael A. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2011
Retrieving information from memory produces more learning than does being presented with the same information, and the benefits of such retrieval appear to grow as the delay before a final recall test grows longer. Recall tests, however, measure the number of items that are above a recall threshold, not memory strength per se. According to the…
Descriptors: Recall (Psychology), Learning Theories, Testing, Feedback (Response)
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Nairne, James S.; Pandeirada, Josefa N. S. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2008
Do the operating characteristics of memory continue to bear the imprints of ancestral selection pressures? Previous work in our laboratory has shown that human memory may be specially tuned to retain information processed in terms of its survival relevance. A few seconds of survival processing in an incidental learning context can produce recall…
Descriptors: Incidental Learning, Memory, Cognitive Processes, Decision Making
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Howe, Mark L.; Wimmer, Marina C.; Gagnon, Nadine; Plumpton, Shannon – Journal of Memory and Language, 2009
The effects of associative strength and gist relations on rates of children's and adults' true and false memories were examined in three experiments. Children aged 5-11 and university-aged adults participated in a standard Deese/Roediger-McDermott false memory task using DRM and category lists in two experiments and in the third, children…
Descriptors: Cues, Semantics, College Students, Children
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Verbeemen, Timothy; Vanpaemel, Wolf; Pattyn, Sven; Storms, Gert; Verguts, Tom – Journal of Memory and Language, 2007
Categorization in well-known natural concepts is studied using a special version of the Varying Abstraction Framework (Vanpaemel, W., & Storms, G. (2006). A varying abstraction framework for categorization. Manuscript submitted for publication; Vanpaemel, W., Storms, G., & Ons, B. (2005). A varying abstraction model for categorization. In B. Bara,…
Descriptors: Memory, Classification, Concept Formation, Multivariate Analysis
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Geraci, Lisa; Rajaram, Suparna – Journal of Memory and Language, 2004
We tested whether the distinctiveness effect in memory (superior memory for isolated or unusual items) only occurs with conscious recollection or could emerge with recapitulation of the type of processing that occurred at study even in the absence of recollection at test. Participants studied lists of categorically isolated exemplars. In…
Descriptors: Memory, Hypothesis Testing, Cues, Test Items