AbstractWe begin with a theoretical overview of the concepts of recollection and familiarity, focusing, in the spirit of this special issue, on the important contributions made by Andrew Mayes. In particular, we discuss the issue of when the generation of semantically-related information in response to a retrieval cue might be experienced as recollection rather than familiarity. We then report a series of experiments in which two different types of masked prime, presented immediately prior to the test cue in a recognition memory paradigm, produced opposite effects on Remember vs. Know judgments. More specifically, primes that were conceptually related to the test item increased the incidence of Remember judgments, though only when intermixe...
■ Familiarity and recollection are qualitatively different explicit-memory phenomena evident during ...
Recently, Chan and McDermott (2007) found that relative to studying words once, taking an initial te...
Copyright © 2006 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.Does recognition memory rely on discrete recollec...
AbstractPrevious research has found that masked repetition primes, presented immediately prior to th...
Recognition memory can be supported by the processes of recollection and familiarity. Recollection i...
This project was designed to examine the nature of recollective experience. Gardiner (1988) showed d...
The nature of recollective experience was examined in a recognition memory task. Subjects gave “reme...
The idea that recognition takes different forms is an old one in the memory literature. Feingold (19...
The difficulty of the cognitive operations required to process study items was manipulated in two ex...
96 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2001.A great deal of interest has f...
Recent research has demonstrated that priming and recognition memory performance are not independent...
Two experiments investigated recollective experience in a source monitoring task. Subjects saw an ar...
The relationship between recognition memory and repetition priming remains unclear. Priming is belie...
Although frequently used with recognition, a few studies have used the Remember/Know procedure with ...
peer reviewedSingle case assessments of patients with selective hippocampal damage, such as patient ...
■ Familiarity and recollection are qualitatively different explicit-memory phenomena evident during ...
Recently, Chan and McDermott (2007) found that relative to studying words once, taking an initial te...
Copyright © 2006 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.Does recognition memory rely on discrete recollec...
AbstractPrevious research has found that masked repetition primes, presented immediately prior to th...
Recognition memory can be supported by the processes of recollection and familiarity. Recollection i...
This project was designed to examine the nature of recollective experience. Gardiner (1988) showed d...
The nature of recollective experience was examined in a recognition memory task. Subjects gave “reme...
The idea that recognition takes different forms is an old one in the memory literature. Feingold (19...
The difficulty of the cognitive operations required to process study items was manipulated in two ex...
96 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2001.A great deal of interest has f...
Recent research has demonstrated that priming and recognition memory performance are not independent...
Two experiments investigated recollective experience in a source monitoring task. Subjects saw an ar...
The relationship between recognition memory and repetition priming remains unclear. Priming is belie...
Although frequently used with recognition, a few studies have used the Remember/Know procedure with ...
peer reviewedSingle case assessments of patients with selective hippocampal damage, such as patient ...
■ Familiarity and recollection are qualitatively different explicit-memory phenomena evident during ...
Recently, Chan and McDermott (2007) found that relative to studying words once, taking an initial te...
Copyright © 2006 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.Does recognition memory rely on discrete recollec...