Literature DB >> 1447551

Memory with and without awareness: performance and electrophysiological evidence of savings.

S Bentin1, M Moscovitch, I Heth.   

Abstract

Event-related potentials (ERPs) recorded on the scalp were shown to be sensitive indicators of the strength of a memory trace on both implicit and explicit tests of memory. In explicit recognition tests, the amplitude of a positive potential identified as P300 was larger for "old" than for "new" words regardless of whether the subject categorized the items correctly. This effect, however, was statistically reliable only when the recognition memory (d') was relatively high. In contrast to ERPs, the reaction times in explicit recognition were sensitive to accuracy but not to repetition. In implicit tests, lexical decisions to repeated words were faster than to newly presented words. The magnitude of the repetition effect varied neither with elapsed time since the last repetition nor with the number of previous repetitions. In contrast, the P300 elicited by the same words were sensitive to both lag and recency of repetition, suggesting that they were influenced by the episodic memory strength of the items.

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1447551     DOI: 10.1037//0278-7393.18.6.1270

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn        ISSN: 0278-7393            Impact factor:   3.051


  9 in total

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Review 6.  Brain substrates of implicit and explicit memory: the importance of concurrently acquired neural signals of both memory types.

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8.  The word frequency effect in recognition memory versus repetition priming.

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Review 9.  The role of partial knowledge in statistical word learning.

Authors:  Daniel Yurovsky; Damian C Fricker; Chen Yu; Linda B Smith
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2014-02
  9 in total

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