Literature DB >> 18154501

Relativity of remembering: why the laws of memory vanished.

Henry L Roediger1.   

Abstract

For 120 years, cognitive psychologists have sought general laws of learning and memory. In this review I conclude that none has stood the test of time. No empirical law withstands manipulation across the four sets of factors that Jenkins (1979) identified as critical to memory experiments: types of subjects, kinds of events to be remembered, manipulation of encoding conditions, and variations in test conditions. Another factor affecting many phenomena is whether a manipulation of conditions occurs in randomized, within-subjects designs rather than between-subjects (or within-subject, blocked) designs. The fact that simple laws do not hold reveals the complex, interactive nature of memory phenomena. Nonetheless, the science of memory is robust, with most findings easily replicated under the same conditions as originally used, but when other variables are manipulated, effects may disappear or reverse. These same points are probably true of psychological research in most, if not all, domains.

Mesh:

Year:  2008        PMID: 18154501     DOI: 10.1146/annurev.psych.57.102904.190139

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Annu Rev Psychol        ISSN: 0066-4308            Impact factor:   24.137


  18 in total

1.  Evidence for similar principles in episodic and semantic memory: the presidential serial position function.

Authors:  Ian Neath
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2010-07

2.  Part-set cuing in option generation.

Authors:  Fabio Del Missier; Chiara Terpini
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2009-04

3.  Assessing a retrieval account of the generation and perceptual-interference effects.

Authors:  Neil W Mulligan; Daniel Peterson
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2008-12

4.  Instability in memory phenomena: a common puzzle and a unifying explanation.

Authors:  Mark A McDaniel; Julie M Bugg
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2008-04

5.  Enactment and retrieval.

Authors:  Daniel J Peterson; Neil W Mulligan
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2010-03

6.  Reversing the course of forgetting.

Authors:  K Geoffrey White; Glenn S Brown
Journal:  J Exp Anal Behav       Date:  2011-09       Impact factor: 2.468

Review 7.  Emotional oddball: A review on memory effects.

Authors:  Helge Schlüter; Ryan P Hackländer; Christina Bermeitinger
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2019-10

8.  Examining the relationship between generation constraint and memory.

Authors:  Matthew P McCurdy; Andrea N Frankenstein; Allison M Sklenar; Pauline Urban Levy; Eric D Leshikar
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2021-01-07

9.  Development, reliability, and validity of PRESTO: a new high-variability sentence recognition test.

Authors:  Jaimie L Gilbert; Terrin N Tamati; David B Pisoni
Journal:  J Am Acad Audiol       Date:  2013-01       Impact factor: 1.664

10.  Mask similarity impacts short-term consolidation in visual working memory.

Authors:  Lisa Durrance Blalock
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2013-12
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