Item-properties may influence item-item associations in serial recall.

Psychon Bull Rev

Department of Psychology, Biological Sciences Building, P217, Edmonton, Alberta, T6G 2E9, Canada,

Published: April 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • Word attributes like frequency and imageability affect how we remember the order of words, with high-frequency words being recalled worse than low-frequency ones in alternating lists.
  • Research suggests that positional-coding models, rather than associative chaining, might explain these patterns, but alternative explanations based on similarity or item-order tradeoffs were found inadequate.
  • New findings indicate that word frequency impacts the strength of associations formed during study and highlight the complexity of how item properties influence serial recall behavior.

Article Abstract

Attributes of words, such as frequency and imageability, can influence memory for order. In serial recall, Hulme, Stuart, Brown, and Morin (Journal of Memory and Language, 49(4), 500-518, 2003) found that high-frequency words were recalled worse, and low-frequency words better, when embedded in alternating lists than pure lists. This is predicted by associative chaining, wherein each recalled list-item becomes a recall-cue for the next item. However, Hulme, Stuart, Brown, and Morin (Journal of Memory and Language, 49(4), 500-518, 2003) argued their findings supported positional-coding models, wherein items are linked to a representation of position, with no direct associations between items. They suggested their serial-position effects were due to pre-experimental semantic similarity between pairs of items, which depended on frequency, or a complex tradeoff between item- and order-coding (Morin, Poirier, Fortin, & Hulme, Psychonomic Bulletin Review, 13(4), 724-729, 2006). We replicated the smooth serial-position effects, but accounts based on pre-existing similarity or item-order tradeoffs were untenable. Alternative accounts based, on imageability, phonological and lexical neighbourhood sizes were also ruled out. The standard chaining account predicts that if accuracy is conditionalized on whether the prior item was correct, the word-frequency effect should reappear in alternating lists; however, this prediction was not borne out, challenging this retrieval-based chaining account. We describe a new account, whereby frequency influences the strengths of item-item associations, symmetrically, during study. A manipulation of word-imageability also produced a pattern consistent with item-item cueing at study, but left room for effects of imageability at the final stage of recall. These findings provide further support for the contribution of associative chaining to serial-recall behaviour and show that item-properties may influence serial-recall in multiple ways.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3758/s13423-014-0701-7DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

item-properties influence
8
item-item associations
8
serial recall
8
hulme stuart
8
stuart brown
8
brown morin
8
morin journal
8
journal memory
8
memory language
8
language 494
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!