| Literature DB >> 10079121 |
T Curran1, D L Schacter, L Galluccio.
Abstract
Implicit memory is often thought to reflect an influence of past experience on perceptual processes, yet priming effects are found when the perceptual format of stimuli changes between study and test episodes. Such cross-modal priming effects have been hypothesized to depend upon stimulus recoding processes whereby a stimulus presented in one modality is converted to other perceptual formats. The present research examined recoding accounts of cross-modal priming by testing patients with verbal production deficits that presumably impair the conversion of visual words into auditory/phonological forms. The patients showed normal priming in a visual stem completion task following visual study (Experiment 1), but showed impairments following auditory study in both implicit (Experiment 2) and explicit (Experiment 3) stem completion. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that verbal production processes contribute to the recoding of visual stimuli and support cross-modal priming. The results also indicate that shared processes contribute to both explicit memory and cross-modal implicit memory. Copyright 1999 Academic Press.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1999 PMID: 10079121 DOI: 10.1006/brcg.1998.1063
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Cogn ISSN: 0278-2626 Impact factor: 2.310