| Literature DB >> 25864489 |
Amy E Learmonth1, Kimberly Cuevas, Carolyn Rovee-Collier.
Abstract
Reactivation is an automatic, perceptual process in which exposure to components of a forgotten event alleviates forgetting. Most research on infant memory reactivation has used conditioning paradigms. We used the puppet imitation task to systematically examine which stimuli could retrieve 6-month-olds' forgotten memory of the modeled actions. Infants watched an adult model a sequence of actions on a puppet, imitated the actions, and were exposed to reactivation cues 24 hr before a 7-day (Experiment 1) or 14-day (Experiment 2) retention test. Exposure to any component of the original event reactivated the memory during the 7-day test, but two of the same components failed to alleviate forgetting during the 14-day test. Increasing the number of retrieval cues facilitated 14-day test performance. These findings reveal that the principles of reactivation are the same for conditioning and imitation paradigms: The necessary and sufficient conditions for memory reactivation are directly related to memory accessibility.Entities:
Keywords: automatic processing; imitation; infants; memory attributes; reactivation; retrieval failure
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25864489 PMCID: PMC4411198 DOI: 10.1002/dev.21298
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dev Psychobiol ISSN: 0012-1630 Impact factor: 3.038