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1.
J Exp Psychol Gen ; 130(3): 453-65, 2001 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11561920

ABSTRACT

Prominent theories of implicit memory (D. Schacter, B. Church, & J. Treadwell, 1994) emphasize the dominant role of perceptual processing in mediating priming on perceptual implicit memory tests. Examinations of the effects of conceptual processing on perceptual implicit memory tests have produced ambiguous results. Although a number of investigations (e.g., J. Toth & R. Hunt, 1990) have demonstrated that variations in conceptual processing affect priming on perceptual implicit memory tests, these effects may arise because of the contaminating effects of explicit memory. The current experiment examined this controversy using midazolam, a benzodiazepine that produces a dense, albeit temporary, anterograde amnesia when injected prior to study. The experiment examined whether the effects of generation found on the implicit memory test of perceptual identification were affected by a midazolam injection prior to study. Results demonstrated that midazolam substantially diminished generation effects in free and cued recall, as well as overall performance on these tests, but had no detectable effect on the generation effect in perceptual identification.


Subject(s)
Concept Formation/drug effects , Mental Recall/drug effects , Midazolam/pharmacology , Paired-Associate Learning/drug effects , Adult , Double-Blind Method , Female , Humans , Male
2.
Mem Cognit ; 28(2): 161-6, 2000 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10790971

ABSTRACT

Many theories of memory predict that the slope of the z-transformed receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) curve should decrease with increases in the memory strength of old items. While several prior studies have failed to demonstrate this effect, the results of two experiments demonstrate that increasing presentation duration can reduce the slope of the z-transformed ROC curve. These results raise questions about the generality of prior results and of dual-process theories designed to accommodate those results. We close by emphasizing that determining the experimental circumstances that affect whether or not the slope of the z-transformed ROC curve decreases will provide important constraints on theories of recognition memory.


Subject(s)
Memory/physiology , ROC Curve , Humans , Mental Recall/physiology , Psychological Theory , Time Factors , Visual Perception , Vocabulary
3.
Psychol Rev ; 107(2): 377-83, 2000 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10789202

ABSTRACT

In an analysis of H. L. Roediger and K. B. McDermott's (1995) false-memory paradigm, M. B. Miller and G. L. Wolford (1999) argued that falsely recognized items occur because a bias toward calling such items "old" is created by their membership in a studied category. This interpretation was contested by Roediger and McDermott (1999). The authors of this article approach this issue as a statistical decision problem and observe that an explanation of false memory based on stored strengths and one based on decision process can have identical implications for data. Problems with equivalent formal models of this type can frequently be resolved by looking at the effects of other variables on the fitted estimates. The authors illustrate this analysis by examining the effects of presentation duration on the parameter estimates produced by models that instantiate the 2 explanations. Although the question remains open, the storage-based interpretation was found to be somewhat more plausible.


Subject(s)
Decision Making , Memory/physiology , Models, Statistical , Psychological Theory , Humans
4.
Brain Cogn ; 41(3): 351-64, 1999 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10585241

ABSTRACT

Substantial empirical evidence exists suggesting that there are distinct forms of explicit and implicit memory. However, methodological problems have hampered attempts to identify the nature of the information processing underlying these forms of memory. These problems include the contamination of performance on implicit memory tests by explicit memory processes, as well as a host of difficulties inherent in correlational approaches that involve amnesiac subjects. In this paper we attempt to explore whether midazolam, a benzodiazepine used in surgical anesthesia, might be useful for studying implicit memory. Specifically, we attempt to determine whether midazolam produces selective effects on explicit, as opposed to implicit, memory. We focus on midazolam because of prior studies demonstrating that benzodiazepines do not affect implicit memory and because its rapid pharmacokinetics ensure that sedative effects are minimized when testing occurs at relatively short retention intervals. The results of an experiment using free recall, fragment completion and perceptual identification tests suggest that midazolam diminishes memory in implicit and explicit memory tests, although the diminution is proportionally larger in explicit memory. These results constrain the inferences that may be drawn when midazolam is used to explore implicit memory.


Subject(s)
Anti-Anxiety Agents/pharmacology , Memory/drug effects , Midazolam/pharmacology , Anti-Anxiety Agents/metabolism , Binding, Competitive/physiology , Double-Blind Method , Hippocampus/physiology , Humans , Injections, Intravenous , Mental Recall/drug effects , Midazolam/metabolism , Neuropsychological Tests , Receptors, GABA/drug effects
5.
Brain Res Cogn Brain Res ; 7(4): 473-9, 1999 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10076092

ABSTRACT

Prominent theories of implicit memory claim that perceptual processes play a central role in implicit memory. The modality-match effect, the finding that priming is greater when the modality of stimulus presentation matches at study and test, provides the central evidence for these approaches. In this paper we use the benzodiazepine, midazolam, to explore the nature of the modality-match effect in implicit memory. We compared the modality-match effect in a midazolam and a saline (i.e., a placebo) condition. Our experimental results demonstrate that the modality-match effect is diminished substantially in a midazolam condition even though components of priming are preserved. Given the empirically-validated assumption that midazolam minimizes explicit memory, these results suggest that there exist components of implicit memory that are not mediated by perceptual processes and raise questions about the generality of prominent theories of implicit memory.


Subject(s)
Auditory Perception/physiology , Memory/drug effects , Midazolam/pharmacology , Visual Perception/physiology , Adult , Auditory Perception/drug effects , Cross-Over Studies , Double-Blind Method , Female , Humans , Male , Memory/physiology , Perception , Reproducibility of Results , Visual Perception/drug effects
6.
Mem Cognit ; 26(5): 857-9, 1998 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9796221

ABSTRACT

The process-dissociation procedure is designed to provide quantitative estimates of the influence of explicit and implicit memory in a variety of tasks. The procedure relies on the assumption that these two forms of memory produce independent influences on performance. Prior investigators have attempted to test this assumption by determining whether the parameter representing the influence of implicit memory (denoted A) is constant across experimental conditions. I argue that the constancy of A cannot provide an appropriate test of the independence assumption, because (1) the prediction of constancy can be generated without the assumption of independence, obviating the need to posit independence; and (2) the constancy of A does not necessarily imply independence, even if one assumes that a dependency hypothesis, supplemented by ancillary assumptions (Curran & Hintzman, 1995), predicts differences in A. I close by emphasizing that we can test the independence assumption by using standard procedures that compare the fit of a model that assumes independence with the fit of a model that assumes dependence.


Subject(s)
Memory/classification , Models, Psychological , Humans , Mental Processes/classification , Psychometrics , Psychomotor Performance , Semantics , Stochastic Processes
7.
Acta Psychol (Amst) ; 98(2-3): 267-90, 1998 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9621834

ABSTRACT

The subjective sense of fluency with which an item can be perceived or remembered is proposed to be a vital cue in making decisions about the future memorability and the nature of our past experience with that stimulus. We first outline a number of cases in which such perceptual or retrieval fluency influences judgments both about our own future performance and our likely past experience, and then present a Bayesian analysis of how judgments of recognition--deciding whether or not a currently viewed item was studied at a particular point in the past--may incorporate information about the perceptual fluency of that item. Using a simple mathematical model, we then provide an interpretation of certain enigmatic phenomena in recognition memory.


Subject(s)
Bayes Theorem , Memory , Models, Psychological , Perception , Humans , Judgment , Likelihood Functions
8.
Am J Psychol ; 111(1): 77-87, 1998.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9624704

ABSTRACT

We empirically investigated whether the auditory and visual subsystems mediating priming interact. We examined the hypothesis that processing in the visual subsystem during an implicit memory test permits access to memories in the auditory subsystem that were stored concurrently with visual memories. We did so by comparing priming in visual perceptual identification following both visual and auditory presentation (multimodal priming), only visual presentation (within-modality priming), or only auditory presentation (cross-modality priming). We focused on the comparison between multimodal and within-modality priming because multimodal priming should be larger than within-modality priming under our hypothesis. However, multimodal priming was approximately equal to within-modality priming in four experimental conditions. These results are consistent with the view that there is limited interaction between the visual and auditory subsystems mediating priming.


Subject(s)
Auditory Perception/physiology , Memory/physiology , Visual Perception/physiology , Humans , Reaction Time , Semantics
10.
Mem Cognit ; 25(3): 345-51, 1997 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9184486

ABSTRACT

Understanding how memory processes contribute to the conscious experience of memory is central to contemporary cognitive psychology. Recently, many investigators (e.g., Gardiner, 1988) have examined the remember-know paradigm to understand the conscious correlates of recognition memory. A variety of studies have demonstrated that variables have different effects on remember and know responses, and these findings have been interpreted in the context of dual-process models of recognition memory. This paper presents a single-process model of the remember-know paradigm, emphasizing the dependence of remember and know judgments on a set of common underlying processes (e.g., criterion setting). We use this model to demonstrate how a single-process model can give rise to the functional dissociations presented in the remember-know literature. We close by detailing procedures for testing our model and describing how those tests may facilitate the development of dual-process models.


Subject(s)
Awareness/physiology , Concept Formation/physiology , Memory/physiology , Pattern Recognition, Visual/physiology , Self-Assessment , Humans , Models, Psychological
11.
Mem Cognit ; 24(3): 367-83, 1996 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8718770

ABSTRACT

The sensory match effect in recognition memory refers to the finding that recognition is better when the sensory form in which an item is tested is the same as that in which it was studied. This paper examines the basis for the sensory match effect by manipulating whether a studied fragmented picture is tested with the same or a complementary set of fragments in a recognition memory test (Experiment 1) and in a fragment-identification test (Experiment 2). Assuming that fragment identification is a direct measure of perceptual fluency, we expected identical patterns of results across the two tests if perceptual fluency accounted for the sensory match effect in recognition memory. Instead, recognition memory showed a robust overall sensory match effect (the same fragmented image was recognized better than the complementary image), whereas fragment identification showed no overall sensory match effect (the same fragmented image was identified no better than the complementary fragmented image). Experiments 3 and 4 combined the two responses and showed that the basis for the sensory match effect in recognition memory was a subject's ability to recognize the matching fragments in the absence of conceptual information (when the test stimulus could not be identified), supporting the idea that the episodic trace of the sensory code is responsible for the sensory match effect in recognition memory. Experiment 5 demonstrated that subjects are able to use this sensory code as the sole basis for recognition memory.


Subject(s)
Form Perception , Memory , Humans
12.
J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn ; 21(2): 302-13, 1995 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7738502

ABSTRACT

This article focuses on decision processes in recognition memory. It begins with investigation of the hypothesis that the measured criterion increases systematically with the memorability of old items. Three experiments using the list-strength paradigm, and a review of the prior literature, present results consistent with this hypothesis. Several psychological models of criterion placement are examined, generating different predictions about the relative sizes of criterion shifts for strong and weak items. A range model, in which criterion placement depends on the estimated range of the old and new distributions, predicts that criterion shifts should be larger for weak items; this result emerges in a reanalysis of prior studies. The general discussion elaborates on how a focus on criterion placement can explain the mirror effect (Glanzer, Adams, Iverson, & Kim, 1993) and provides a framework for testing Shiffrin, Ratcliff, and Clark's (1990) claims about why null effects of list strength occur with repetition.


Subject(s)
Attention , Decision Making , Mental Recall , Verbal Learning , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Models, Psychological , Psycholinguistics , Retention, Psychology
13.
J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn ; 20(1): 150-60, 1994 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8138783

ABSTRACT

This article compares the effect of picture fragmentation level at study on performance on a variety of implicit and explicit memory tests. Consistent with previous research, a moderately fragmented study picture produced the most learning on the implicit memory task of picture fragment completion (Experiment 1) and speeded picture identification (Experiment 4). In contrast, an intact study picture produced the most learning on the implicit memory task of naming intact pictures (Experiment 3). These results suggest that performance on 2 implicit memory tasks can be dissociated by differences in visual similarity between the study and test forms of a stimulus. More surprising, parallel effects were observed in recognition memory. Recognition memory was best when fragmentation levels of the study and test pictures matched (Experiment 2) or were comparable (Experiment 1). In contrast to many results in the literature, recognition memory was acutely sensitive to surface form differences. We discuss the results in terms of 2 types of study-test similarity-stimulus similarity and process similarity.


Subject(s)
Form Perception , Memory , Perceptual Closure , Adolescent , Adult , Humans , Mental Recall , Reaction Time , Task Performance and Analysis
14.
Mem Cognit ; 21(1): 5-10, 1993 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8433648

ABSTRACT

Burns (1989) claims that proactive interference effects occur in paired-associate learning because of tradeoffs in relational and response-specific processing. Consistent with this claim, Burns demonstrated that free recall of critical-list responses is better in the interference condition than in the control condition. Burns's processing tradeoff explanation predicts that the occurrence of this reverse-interference effect should be positively correlated with the occurrence of traditional interference effects. We present several experiments whose results are inconsistent with this prediction. We hypothesize that the reverse-interference effect is a list-length effect. The results of a final experiment, contrasting the predictions of the list-length and processing tradeoff explanations, support the list-length explanation.


Subject(s)
Attention , Mental Recall , Paired-Associate Learning , Proactive Inhibition , Adult , Female , Humans , Male
15.
J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn ; 17(3): 507-13, 1991 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1829474

ABSTRACT

Nairne (1988) has recently demonstrated that interfering with the perceptual processing of an item at study improves later memory for that item. Nairne hypothesized that interfering with perceptual processes induces a data-driven generation process that enhances the representation of visual information. Using a variant of Nairne's procedure, we both replicated his original findings and tested his hypothesis that enhanced data-driven processing causes the current effect. The results of studies using free recall and perceptual identification tests were inconsistent with Nairne's hypothesis. We consider several alternative interpretations in the General Discussion.


Subject(s)
Attention , Mental Recall , Perceptual Masking , Verbal Learning , Visual Perception , Adult , Humans
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