Gyula Kovács and Mihály Racsmány contributed equally to this study. The testing effect refers to the phenomenon that repeated retrieval of memories promotes better long-term retention than repeated study. To investigate the neural correlates of the testing effect, we used event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging methods while participants performed a cued recall task. Prior to the neuroi-maging experiment, participants learned Swahili–German word pairs, then half of the word pairs were repeatedly studied, whereas the other half were repeatedly tested. For half of the participants, the neuroimaging experiment was performed immediately after the learning phase; a 1-week retention interval was inserted for the other half of the part...
At a large scale, the human brain is organized into modules of interconnected regions, some of which...
The acquisition and maintenance of new language information, such as picking up new words, is a crit...
Spaced learning with time to consolidate leads to more stabile memory traces. However, little is kno...
Gyula Kovács and Mihály Racsmány contributed equally to this study. The testing effect refers to the...
© Copyright © 2021 Marin-Garcia, Mattfeld and Gabrieli. Retrieval practice, relative to further stud...
AbstractTests that require memory retrieval strongly improve long-term retention in comparison to co...
People learn better when re-study opportunities are replaced with tests. While researchers have begu...
People learn better when re-study opportunities are replaced with tests. While researchers have begu...
Abstract Introduction and Methods A large number of behavioral studies show that retrieval practice ...
Repeated study improves memory, but the underlying neural mechanisms of this improvement are not wel...
Testing facilitates memory retention more than studying. The current experiment aimed to investigate...
The enhanced memory performance for items that are tested as compared to being restudied (the testin...
Contains fulltext : 53452.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Spaced learnin...
Memory retrieval is an active process that can alter the content and accessibility of stored memorie...
One of the less well-understood aspects of memory function is the mechanism by which the brain respo...
At a large scale, the human brain is organized into modules of interconnected regions, some of which...
The acquisition and maintenance of new language information, such as picking up new words, is a crit...
Spaced learning with time to consolidate leads to more stabile memory traces. However, little is kno...
Gyula Kovács and Mihály Racsmány contributed equally to this study. The testing effect refers to the...
© Copyright © 2021 Marin-Garcia, Mattfeld and Gabrieli. Retrieval practice, relative to further stud...
AbstractTests that require memory retrieval strongly improve long-term retention in comparison to co...
People learn better when re-study opportunities are replaced with tests. While researchers have begu...
People learn better when re-study opportunities are replaced with tests. While researchers have begu...
Abstract Introduction and Methods A large number of behavioral studies show that retrieval practice ...
Repeated study improves memory, but the underlying neural mechanisms of this improvement are not wel...
Testing facilitates memory retention more than studying. The current experiment aimed to investigate...
The enhanced memory performance for items that are tested as compared to being restudied (the testin...
Contains fulltext : 53452.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Spaced learnin...
Memory retrieval is an active process that can alter the content and accessibility of stored memorie...
One of the less well-understood aspects of memory function is the mechanism by which the brain respo...
At a large scale, the human brain is organized into modules of interconnected regions, some of which...
The acquisition and maintenance of new language information, such as picking up new words, is a crit...
Spaced learning with time to consolidate leads to more stabile memory traces. However, little is kno...