Contains fulltext : 227383.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)We learn through language, sometimes by ourselves, through reading or watching the news, and sometimes with others, through conversation. Perhaps it would make sense for us, then, to remember what we read or hear especially well. However, evidence from memory research in the last few decades suggests that people remember the language they produce themselves better than the language they comprehend. In my doctoral thesis, I asked whether the above positions can be reconciled by taking into account natural language and communicative contexts, which have generally been overlooked in memory research. First, I ensured that, in non-communicative contexts, people ...
People perceive the same situation described in direct speech (e.g., John said, “I like the food at ...
This dissertation examines the effects of signal-related articulatory-acoustic enhancements in the f...
Previous research on the production effect shows that reading words aloud improves people’s memory f...
We learn through language, sometimes by ourselves, through reading or watching the news, and sometim...
The study of human memory often focuses on the benefit of context congruency. In the auditory domain...
RHETORICAL MEMORY AND MNEMONICS 4 People often imagine at some po...
This research examines a possible relationship between intentional memory and possible phonologic cu...
Words in casual speech are highly variable. People are able to understand multiple versions of spoke...
Clear speech can be more intelligible and better remembered than casual speech. Intelligibility and ...
International audienceThe joint impact of emotion and production on conversational memory was examin...
The present research explored the effect of selective remembering and the resulting silences on me...
The memory improvement for words that are read aloud compared to silently (the production effect) wa...
Implicit memory is generally preserved in people with organic memory damage and has been shown in l...
This research addresses the effect of word characteristics on memory. Previous research has shown th...
The joint impact of emotion and production on conversational memory was examined in two experiments ...
People perceive the same situation described in direct speech (e.g., John said, “I like the food at ...
This dissertation examines the effects of signal-related articulatory-acoustic enhancements in the f...
Previous research on the production effect shows that reading words aloud improves people’s memory f...
We learn through language, sometimes by ourselves, through reading or watching the news, and sometim...
The study of human memory often focuses on the benefit of context congruency. In the auditory domain...
RHETORICAL MEMORY AND MNEMONICS 4 People often imagine at some po...
This research examines a possible relationship between intentional memory and possible phonologic cu...
Words in casual speech are highly variable. People are able to understand multiple versions of spoke...
Clear speech can be more intelligible and better remembered than casual speech. Intelligibility and ...
International audienceThe joint impact of emotion and production on conversational memory was examin...
The present research explored the effect of selective remembering and the resulting silences on me...
The memory improvement for words that are read aloud compared to silently (the production effect) wa...
Implicit memory is generally preserved in people with organic memory damage and has been shown in l...
This research addresses the effect of word characteristics on memory. Previous research has shown th...
The joint impact of emotion and production on conversational memory was examined in two experiments ...
People perceive the same situation described in direct speech (e.g., John said, “I like the food at ...
This dissertation examines the effects of signal-related articulatory-acoustic enhancements in the f...
Previous research on the production effect shows that reading words aloud improves people’s memory f...