Title of article
Exploring the contributions of declarative and procedural information to training: A test of the procedural reinstatement principle
Author/Authors
Lohse، نويسنده , , Keith R. and Healy، نويسنده , , Alice F.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages
8
From page
65
To page
72
Abstract
According to the procedural reinstatement principle, procedural information leads to strong retention but limited transfer, whereas declarative information leads to poor retention but robust transfer. To test this principle in Experiment 1, participants were trained to perform a serial response task in one of 3 conditions (declarative, procedural, mixed) and were subsequently tested in either the same or another condition. Required responses were identical in the three conditions; they differed only in the emphasis given to declarative or procedural information. Consistent with the procedural reinstatement principle, in terms of response time procedural information was more durable than declarative information. In Experiment 2, transfer was assessed using procedural and declarative conditions, but participants transferred between response sequences within those conditions. Although there was transfer in response time between sequences with procedural information, the greatest magnitude of transfer was found in one direction with declarative information, consistent with the procedural reinstatement principle.
Keywords
Procedural reinstatement , Learning , Training , Retention and transfer , Serial response time , Procedural and declarative information
Journal title
Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition
Serial Year
2012
Journal title
Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition
Record number
2231877
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