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1.
Q J Exp Psychol (Hove) ; 71(11): 2334-2341, 2018 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30362399

ABSTRACT

Recent research found that implicit rehearsal of distraction can reduce forgetting for older adults, in part due to their inefficient regulation of irrelevant information. Here, we investigated whether young adults' memory can also benefit from critical information presented as distraction. Participants recalled a list of words initially and then again after a 15-min delay, with some of the critical studied words exposed as distraction during the delay. We tested young adults at an optimal versus non-optimal time of day, the latter a condition intended to mirror patterns of those with reduced attention regulation. We also varied task instruction to assess whether awareness of an upcoming memory task would influence implicit rehearsal of distraction. The task instruction manipulation was ineffective, but desynchronising time of testing and period of optimal cognitive arousal resulted in a memory benefit. Young adults tested at a non-optimal time showed minimal forgetting of words repeated as distraction, while those tested at an optimal time showed no memory benefit for these items, consistent with research suggesting that attention regulation is greatly affected by circadian arousal.


Subject(s)
Attention/physiology , Memory Disorders/therapy , Mental Recall/physiology , Adolescent , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Memory Disorders/physiopathology , Time Factors , Verbal Learning , Vocabulary , Young Adult
2.
Memory ; 26(10): 1396-1401, 2018 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29862880

ABSTRACT

Cultural differences in information processing affect perceptual judgment, attention, and memory. We investigated whether cultural differences in processing patterns, specifically East Asian participants' tendency to encode holistically, compared to Western tendencies to process analytically, affect performance on an implicit memory test. First, participants completed a 1-back task on pictures with superimposed distracting words. After a delay filled with a computerised Corsi block task, they performed a word fragment task in which some fragments could be completed with the distracting words from the 1-back task. Critically, fragments were presented with the same pictures as previously seen (matched condition), with no pictures (control condition), or with pictures from other trials on the 1-back task (mismatched condition). Non-Asian Canadian participants showed virtually no priming for distraction, independent of the reinstatement of encoding context. East Asian Canadian participants showed superior priming for fragments that had been paired with their original pictures. They did not show evidence of a detriment for the mismatched, relative to control, condition.


Subject(s)
Attention/physiology , Culture , Repetition Priming/physiology , Adolescent , Adult , Awareness , Canada , Asia, Eastern/ethnology , Female , Humans , Male , Young Adult
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