International audienceThe secondary distinctiveness effect means that items that are unusual compared to one's general knowledge stored in permanent memory are remembered better than common items. This research studied two forms of secondary-distinctiveness-based effects in conjunction: the bizarreness effect and the orthographic distinctiveness (OD) effect. More specifically, an experiment investigated in young adults a possible additive effect of bizarreness and OD effects in free recall performance. Results revealed that in young adults these two secondary-distinctiveness-based effects appear to be largely independent and can complement each other to enhance performance. Findings are discussed in light of current distinctiveness theory
In this article, we report on two experiments that aimed to shed light on the memorability effect th...
Modifications to the original levels-of-processing theory (Craik and Lockhart; 1972) have given rise...
Words that deviate in their physical characteristics from their surrounding lead to enhanced recall ...
The secondary distinctiveness effect is the effect that stimuli that are unusual or different from s...
The distinctiveness effect refers to the empirical finding of superior memory for items that stand o...
Orthographic distinctiveness and semantic elaboration both enhance memory. The present behavioral an...
People show better memory for bizarre sentences relative to common sentences, a finding referred to ...
The purpose of this study was to explore bizarreness, a type of imagery, as a proposed phenomenon in...
This research examined the effects of the bizarreness attribute of imagery on memory. While previous...
Enhanced memory for oddball items has been long established, but the basis for these effects is not ...
Existing literature on bizarreness effects in verbal learning mainly focuses on the common assumptio...
The typical formulation of Pascal Boyer’s counterintuitiveness theory asserts that concepts violatin...
Effects of distinctiveness have been investigated with explicit memory tests, but not implicit memor...
The Attentional Boost Effect (ABE) refers to the counter-intuitive finding that the detection of inf...
Distinctive words elicit the P300 component of the event‐related brain potential, and are also likel...
In this article, we report on two experiments that aimed to shed light on the memorability effect th...
Modifications to the original levels-of-processing theory (Craik and Lockhart; 1972) have given rise...
Words that deviate in their physical characteristics from their surrounding lead to enhanced recall ...
The secondary distinctiveness effect is the effect that stimuli that are unusual or different from s...
The distinctiveness effect refers to the empirical finding of superior memory for items that stand o...
Orthographic distinctiveness and semantic elaboration both enhance memory. The present behavioral an...
People show better memory for bizarre sentences relative to common sentences, a finding referred to ...
The purpose of this study was to explore bizarreness, a type of imagery, as a proposed phenomenon in...
This research examined the effects of the bizarreness attribute of imagery on memory. While previous...
Enhanced memory for oddball items has been long established, but the basis for these effects is not ...
Existing literature on bizarreness effects in verbal learning mainly focuses on the common assumptio...
The typical formulation of Pascal Boyer’s counterintuitiveness theory asserts that concepts violatin...
Effects of distinctiveness have been investigated with explicit memory tests, but not implicit memor...
The Attentional Boost Effect (ABE) refers to the counter-intuitive finding that the detection of inf...
Distinctive words elicit the P300 component of the event‐related brain potential, and are also likel...
In this article, we report on two experiments that aimed to shed light on the memorability effect th...
Modifications to the original levels-of-processing theory (Craik and Lockhart; 1972) have given rise...
Words that deviate in their physical characteristics from their surrounding lead to enhanced recall ...