Copyright © 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.Recognition memory experiments are an important source of empirical constraints for theories of memory. Unfortunately, standard methods for analyzing recognition memory data have problems that are often severe enough to prevent clear answers being obtained. A key example is whether longer lists lead to poorer recognition performance. The presence or absence of such a list-length effect is a critical test of competing item- and context-noise based theories of interference and bares on whether recognition involves "recall-like" components as dual process theories would contend. However, the issue has remained unresolved, in part, because of the weaknesses of the standard analysis. In this pap...
A powerful theoretical framework for exploring recognition memory is the global matching framework, ...
While many studies have investigated the list length effect in recognition memory, few have done so ...
We develop a probabilistic model of human memory performance in free recall experiments. In these ex...
The list length effect in recognition memory has been the subject of recent debate. Many studies hav...
The list length effect in recognition memory has been the subject of recent debate. Many studies hav...
The list length effect in recognition memory refers to the finding that recognition performance for ...
The present thesis aimed to investigate the source of interference in recognition memory. There are ...
Manipulating either list length (e.g., few vs. many study items) or encoding strength (e.g., one pre...
The list length effect is a phenomenon in which performance improves when the number of studied item...
This article may not exactly replicate the final version published in the APA journal. It is not the...
Item noise models of recognition assert that interference at retrieval is generated by the words fro...
An ongoing debate in the memory literature concerns whether the list-length effect (better memory fo...
The study of list length effects (adding items to a list affects memory for the other items) and lis...
Episodic memory, the processes by which information about experienced events is encoded into some lo...
Research on the list strength effect (LSE) has shown that learning some words on a list more strongl...
A powerful theoretical framework for exploring recognition memory is the global matching framework, ...
While many studies have investigated the list length effect in recognition memory, few have done so ...
We develop a probabilistic model of human memory performance in free recall experiments. In these ex...
The list length effect in recognition memory has been the subject of recent debate. Many studies hav...
The list length effect in recognition memory has been the subject of recent debate. Many studies hav...
The list length effect in recognition memory refers to the finding that recognition performance for ...
The present thesis aimed to investigate the source of interference in recognition memory. There are ...
Manipulating either list length (e.g., few vs. many study items) or encoding strength (e.g., one pre...
The list length effect is a phenomenon in which performance improves when the number of studied item...
This article may not exactly replicate the final version published in the APA journal. It is not the...
Item noise models of recognition assert that interference at retrieval is generated by the words fro...
An ongoing debate in the memory literature concerns whether the list-length effect (better memory fo...
The study of list length effects (adding items to a list affects memory for the other items) and lis...
Episodic memory, the processes by which information about experienced events is encoded into some lo...
Research on the list strength effect (LSE) has shown that learning some words on a list more strongl...
A powerful theoretical framework for exploring recognition memory is the global matching framework, ...
While many studies have investigated the list length effect in recognition memory, few have done so ...
We develop a probabilistic model of human memory performance in free recall experiments. In these ex...