Whether recall of studied words (e.g., parsley, rosemary, thyme) could reduce false recognition of related lures (e.g., basil) was investigated. Subjects studied words from several categories for a final recognition memory test. Half of the subjects were given standard test instructions, and half were instructed to use recall to reduce false recognition. Manipulation checks indicated that the latter instructions did elicit a recall-to-reject strategy. However, false recognition was selectively reduced only when all the words from a category could be recalled (Experiment 1). When longer categories were used, thereby minimizing exhaustive recall, a recall-to-reject strategy was ineffective at reducing false recognition (Experiment 2). It is s...
Two experiments (modeled after J. Deese's 1959 study) revealed remarkable levels of false recal...
Two experiments (modeled after J. Deese's 1959 study) revealed remarkable levels of false recal...
There is disagreement between memory researchers over whether false memories are caused at encoding ...
This experiment was designed to examine false memories. Twenty-five participants listened to eight l...
Roediger and McDermott (1995) showed that presentation of associated words can induce false recognit...
Many recent investigations of false memories have generally followed Roediger & McDermott (1995) in ...
A reduction in false alarms to critical lures is observed in the DRM paradigm (Roediger & McDermott,...
A reduction in false alarms to critical lures is observed in the DRM paradigm (Roediger & McDermott,...
A reduction in false alarms to critical lures is observed in the DRM paradigm (Roediger & McDermott,...
The production of false alarms in recognition memory tests has long been of interest to memory resea...
False recall occurs when people remember spurious details or events that did not originally occur. T...
K. J. Malmberg, J. Holden, and R. M. Shiffrin (2004) reported more false alarms for low- than high-f...
False memory is the phenomenon where people recall detailed information that did not occur. In this ...
high-frequency words when the foils were similar to the targets. According to the source of activati...
Two experiments (modeled after J. Deese's 1959 study) revealed remarkable levels of false recal...
Two experiments (modeled after J. Deese's 1959 study) revealed remarkable levels of false recal...
Two experiments (modeled after J. Deese's 1959 study) revealed remarkable levels of false recal...
There is disagreement between memory researchers over whether false memories are caused at encoding ...
This experiment was designed to examine false memories. Twenty-five participants listened to eight l...
Roediger and McDermott (1995) showed that presentation of associated words can induce false recognit...
Many recent investigations of false memories have generally followed Roediger & McDermott (1995) in ...
A reduction in false alarms to critical lures is observed in the DRM paradigm (Roediger & McDermott,...
A reduction in false alarms to critical lures is observed in the DRM paradigm (Roediger & McDermott,...
A reduction in false alarms to critical lures is observed in the DRM paradigm (Roediger & McDermott,...
The production of false alarms in recognition memory tests has long been of interest to memory resea...
False recall occurs when people remember spurious details or events that did not originally occur. T...
K. J. Malmberg, J. Holden, and R. M. Shiffrin (2004) reported more false alarms for low- than high-f...
False memory is the phenomenon where people recall detailed information that did not occur. In this ...
high-frequency words when the foils were similar to the targets. According to the source of activati...
Two experiments (modeled after J. Deese's 1959 study) revealed remarkable levels of false recal...
Two experiments (modeled after J. Deese's 1959 study) revealed remarkable levels of false recal...
Two experiments (modeled after J. Deese's 1959 study) revealed remarkable levels of false recal...
There is disagreement between memory researchers over whether false memories are caused at encoding ...