Title of article :
A dual-process account of the list-length and strength-based mirror effects in recognition
Author/Authors :
Reder، Lynne M. نويسنده , , Cary، Melanie نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages :
-230
From page :
231
To page :
0
Abstract :
Manipulating either list length (e.g., few vs. many study items) or encoding strength (e.g., one presentation vs. multiple presentations of each study item) produces a recognition mirror effect. A formal dual-process theory of recognition memory that accounts for the wordfrequency mirror effect is extended to account for the list-length and strength-based mirror effects. According to this theory, the hit portions of these mirror effects result from differential ease of recollection-based recognition, and the false alarm portions result from differential reliance on familiarity-based recognition. This account yields predictions for participants’ Remember and Know responses as a function of list length and encoding strength. Empirical data and model fits from four experiments support these predictions. The data also demonstrate a reliable list-length effect when several potential confounding factors are controlled, contributing to the debate regarding the effect of list length on recognition.
Keywords :
Word recognition , Mirror effects , Encoding strength , List length , Memory
Journal title :
Journal of Memory and Language
Serial Year :
2003
Journal title :
Journal of Memory and Language
Record number :
65839
Link To Document :
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