Literature DB >> 15913004

On the contribution of perceptual fluency and priming to recognition memory.

M A Conroy1, R O Hopkins, L R Squire.   

Abstract

Repetition priming has been shown to be independent of recognition memory. Thus, the severely amnesic patient E.P. has demonstrated intact stem completion priming and perceptual identification priming, despite at-chance performance on recognition memory tasks. It has also been shown that perceptual fluency can influence feelings of familiarity, in the sense that items perceived more quickly tend to be identified as familiar. If studied items are identified more fluently, due to perceptual priming, and fluency leads to familiarity, why do severely amnesic patients perform no better than chance on recognition memory tasks? One possibility is that severely amnesic patients do not exhibit normal fluency. Another possibility is that fluency is not a sufficiently strong cue for familiarity. In two experiments, 2 severely amnesic patients, 3 moderately amnesic patients, and 8 controls saw words slowly clearing from a mask. The participants identified each word as quickly as possible and then made a recognition (old/new) judgment. All the participants exhibited fluency, in that old responses were associated with shorter identification times than new responses were. In addition, for the severely amnesic patients, priming was intact, and recognition memory performance was at chance. We next calculated how much priming and fluency should elevate the probability of accurate recognition. The tendency to identify studied words rapidly (.6) and the tendency to label these rapidly identified words old (.6) would result in 36% of the studied words being labeled old. Other studied words were identified slowly (.4) but were still labeled old (.4), resulting in an additional 16% of studied words labeled old. Thus, the presence of fluency increases the probability of accurate recognition judgments to only 52% (chance = 50%). This finding explains why amnesic patients can exhibit both priming and fluency yet still perform at chance on recognition tests.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15913004      PMCID: PMC2754391          DOI: 10.3758/cabn.5.1.14

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci        ISSN: 1530-7026            Impact factor:   3.282


  19 in total

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Authors:  R A Poldrack; G D Logan
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4.  Dissociations between familiarity processes in explicit recognition and implicit perceptual memory.

Authors:  A D Wagner; J D Gabrieli; M Verfaellie
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn       Date:  1997-03       Impact factor: 3.051

5.  Intact perceptual memory in the absence of conscious memory.

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Journal:  Behav Neurosci       Date:  1997-08       Impact factor: 1.912

6.  Priming deficits in amnesia: now you see them, now you don't.

Authors:  A L Ostergaard
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7.  Perceptual fluency as a cue for recognition judgments in amnesia.

Authors:  M Verfaellie; L S Cermak
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8.  Recognition memory and familiarity judgments in severe amnesia: no evidence for a contribution of repetition priming.

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  21 in total

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Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2015-01-04       Impact factor: 6.556

8.  A single-system model predicts recognition memory and repetition priming in amnesia.

Authors:  Christopher J Berry; Roy P C Kessels; Arie J Wester; David R Shanks
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2014-08-13       Impact factor: 6.167

9.  Visuospatial sequence learning without seeing.

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10.  The discovery of processing stages: Extension of Sternberg's method.

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