It has been reported that performing bilateral eye movements for a short period can lead to an enhancement of memory retrieval and recall (termed the “saccade induced retrieval effect (SIRE)”). The source of this effect has been debated within the literature and the phenomenon has come under scrutiny as the robustness of the effect has recently been questioned. To date investigations of SIRE have largely been restricted to younger adult populations. Here, across two experiments, we assess the robustness and generalisability of the SIRE specifically in relation to disease and ageing. Experiment 1 employed a between subject’s design and presented younger and older participants with 36 words prior to completing one of three eye movement condit...
The basis of visual short-term memory (VSTM) impairments in preclinical Alzheimer’s disease (AD) rem...
The basis of visual short-term memory (VSTM) impairments in preclinical Alzheimer's disease (AD) rem...
Recent research has shown superior memory retrieval when participants make a series of horizontal sa...
It has been reported that performing bilateral eye movements for a short period can lead to an enhan...
Several recent studies have reported enhanced memory when retrieval is preceded by repetitive horizo...
There is evidence that making 30 seconds of bilateral eye movements improves memory in young adults ...
Past research has shown that saccadic bilateral eye movements, handedness and age affect performance...
Performing a sequence of fast saccadic horizontal eye movements has been shown to facilitate perform...
Two experiments examining effects of eye movements on episodic memory retrieval are reported. Thirty...
Handedness can be used as a marker for interhemispheric interaction, which can produce memory benefi...
Saccade-induced retrieval enhancement (SIRE) effects refer to the finding that memory can be enhance...
The effect of eye movement (bilateral/horizontal, vertical and central) on episodic memory was teste...
Research has demonstrated that performing a sequence of saccadic horizontal eye movements prior to r...
OBJECTIVE: Long-term visual memory representations, measured by recognition performance, degrade as ...
Two experiments are presented that investigated the effects of horizontal saccadic eye movements and...
The basis of visual short-term memory (VSTM) impairments in preclinical Alzheimer’s disease (AD) rem...
The basis of visual short-term memory (VSTM) impairments in preclinical Alzheimer's disease (AD) rem...
Recent research has shown superior memory retrieval when participants make a series of horizontal sa...
It has been reported that performing bilateral eye movements for a short period can lead to an enhan...
Several recent studies have reported enhanced memory when retrieval is preceded by repetitive horizo...
There is evidence that making 30 seconds of bilateral eye movements improves memory in young adults ...
Past research has shown that saccadic bilateral eye movements, handedness and age affect performance...
Performing a sequence of fast saccadic horizontal eye movements has been shown to facilitate perform...
Two experiments examining effects of eye movements on episodic memory retrieval are reported. Thirty...
Handedness can be used as a marker for interhemispheric interaction, which can produce memory benefi...
Saccade-induced retrieval enhancement (SIRE) effects refer to the finding that memory can be enhance...
The effect of eye movement (bilateral/horizontal, vertical and central) on episodic memory was teste...
Research has demonstrated that performing a sequence of saccadic horizontal eye movements prior to r...
OBJECTIVE: Long-term visual memory representations, measured by recognition performance, degrade as ...
Two experiments are presented that investigated the effects of horizontal saccadic eye movements and...
The basis of visual short-term memory (VSTM) impairments in preclinical Alzheimer’s disease (AD) rem...
The basis of visual short-term memory (VSTM) impairments in preclinical Alzheimer's disease (AD) rem...
Recent research has shown superior memory retrieval when participants make a series of horizontal sa...