| Literature DB >> 26207100 |
Patricia J Bauer1, O Evren Güler2, Rebecca M Starr3, Thanujeni Pathman1.
Abstract
Explanations of variability in long-term recall typically appeal to encoding and/or retrieval processes. However, for well over a century, it has been apparent that for memory traces to be stored successfully, they must undergo a post-encoding process of stabilization and integration. Variability in post-encoding processes is thus a potential source of age-related and individual variance in long-term recall. We examined post-encoding variability in each of two experiments. In each experiment, 20-month-old infants were exposed to novel three-step sequences in each of three encoding conditions: watch only, imitate, and learn to criterion. They were tested for recall after 15 min (as a measure of the success of encoding) and either weeks (1, 2, or 3: Experiment 1) or days (1, 2, or 4: Experiment 2) later. In each experiment, differential relative levels of performance among the conditions were observed at the two tests. The results implicate post-encoding processes are a source of variance in long-term recall.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 26207100 PMCID: PMC4509549 DOI: 10.1111/j.1532-7078.2010.00057.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infancy ISSN: 1532-7078