Literature DB >> 23661190

Memory as discrimination: what distraction reveals.

C Philip Beaman1, Maciej Hanczakowski, Helen M Hodgetts, John E Marsh, Dylan M Jones.   

Abstract

Recalling information involves the process of discriminating between relevant and irrelevant information stored in memory. Not infrequently, the relevant information needs to be selected from among a series of related possibilities. This is likely to be particularly problematic when the irrelevant possibilities not only are temporally or contextually appropriate, but also overlap semantically with the target or targets. Here, we investigate the extent to which purely perceptual features that discriminate between irrelevant and target material can be used to overcome the negative impact of contextual and semantic relatedness. Adopting a distraction paradigm, it is demonstrated that when distractors are interleaved with targets presented either visually (Experiment 1) or auditorily (Experiment 2), a within-modality semantic distraction effect occurs; semantically related distractors impact upon recall more than do unrelated distractors. In the semantically related condition, the number of intrusions in recall is reduced, while the number of correctly recalled targets is simultaneously increased by the presence of perceptual cues to relevance (color features in Experiment 1 or speaker's gender in Experiment 2). However, as is demonstrated in Experiment 3, even presenting semantically related distractors in a language and a sensory modality (spoken Welsh) distinct from that of the targets (visual English) is insufficient to eliminate false recalls completely or to restore correct recall to levels seen with unrelated distractors . Together, the study shows how semantic and nonsemantic discriminability shape patterns of both erroneous and correct recall.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23661190     DOI: 10.3758/s13421-013-0327-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mem Cognit        ISSN: 0090-502X


  30 in total

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2.  Erroneous and veridical recall are not two sides of the same coin: Evidence from semantic distraction in free recall.

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