| Literature DB >> 15948620 |
Anthony B Fallon1, Eva Mak, Gerald Tehan, Charmaine Daly.
Abstract
The retrieval-based account of serial recall (Saint-Aubin & Poirier, 2000) attributes lexicality, phonological similarity, and articulatory suppression effects to a process where long-term representations are used to reconstruct degraded phonological traces. Two experiments tested this assumption by manipulating these factors in the recall of four- and five-item lists of words and non-words. Lexicality enhanced item recall (IR), but only affected position accuracy (PA) for five-item lists under suppression. Phonological similarity influenced both words and non-words, and produced impaired PA in silent and suppressed conditions. Consistent with the retrieval-based account, words and non-words of high word-likeness appear subject to redintegration. However, some findings, like suppression not reducing the phonological similarity impairment in suppressed conditions, present challenges for the retrieval-based account and other models of serial recall.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2005 PMID: 15948620 DOI: 10.1080/09658210344000215
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Memory ISSN: 0965-8211