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1.
Am J Psychol ; 114(2): 199-217, 2001.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11430149

ABSTRACT

Encoding action phrases by enactment produces better recall than hearing or reading the action phrase. This study examined whether enactment enhances memory relative to observing another perform the same action. Theories of the enactment effect suggest that the complexity of the action, here manipulated by varying the number of objects involved in an action, may determine whether enactment enhances memory relative to observation. The results revealed a consistent subject-performed task advantage across all object conditions; the size of the effect did not vary with increasing task complexity. Additionally, items that included the use of an object were recalled better than those without objects. The results are consistent with the views of Engelkamp and Zimmer (1997) and Backman, Nilsson, & Kormi-Nouri (1993), who argued that the SPT effect is due to motor and/or sensory encoding.


Subject(s)
Memory, Short-Term , Mental Recall , Pattern Recognition, Visual , Visual Perception , Adult , Analysis of Variance , Female , Humans , Male , Mental Processes , Task Performance and Analysis
2.
J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn ; 26(3): 626-37, 2000 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10855421

ABSTRACT

Prior research indicates that manipulations of attention during encoding sometimes affect perceptual implicit memory. Two hypotheses were investigated. One proposes that manipulations of attention affect perceptual priming only to the extent that they disrupt stimulus identification. The other attributes reduced priming to the disruptive effects of distractor selection. The role of attention was investigated with a variant of the Stroop task in which participants either read words, identified their color, or did both. Identifying the color reduced priming even when the word was also overtly identified. This result held regardless of whether color and word were presented as a single object (Experiments 1 and 2) or as separate objects (Experiment 4). When participants read and identified a color, the overt order of the responses did not matter; both conditions reduced priming relative to reading alone (Experiment 3). The results provide evidence against the stimulus-identification account but are consistent with the distractor-selection hypothesis.


Subject(s)
Attention , Cognition , Cues , Memory , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Models, Psychological , Neuropsychological Tests , Perceptual Masking , Semantics
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