A theoretical account of the mirror effect for word frequency and of dissociations in the pattern of responding Remember vs. Know (R vs. K) for low- and high-frequency words was tested both empirically and computationally by comparing predicted with observed data theory in 3 experiments. The SAC (Source of Activation Confusion) theory of memory makes the novel prediction of more K responses for high- than for low-frequency words, for both old and new items. Two experiments used a continuous presentation and judgment paradigm that presented words up to 10 times. The computer simulation closely modeled the pattern of results, fitting new Know and Remember patterns of responding at each level of experimental presentation and for both levels of...
A mirror effect can be produced by manipulating word class (e.g., high vs. low frequency) or by mani...
the effect of list composition on word recognition. The predictions were empirically tested for two-...
The current study assessed whether the word frequency mirror effect in recognition memory changes ac...
A theoretical account of the mirror effect for word frequency and of dissociations in the pattern of...
A theoretical account of the mirror effect for word frequency and of dissociations in the pattern of...
The word-frequency mirror effect (more hits and fewer false alarms for low-frequency than for high-f...
Dual-process models of the word-frequency mirror effect posit that low-frequency words are recollect...
K. J. Malmberg, J. Holden, and R. M. Shiffrin (2004) reported more false alarms for low- than high-f...
high-frequency words when the foils were similar to the targets. According to the source of activati...
The word frequency mirror effect is the observation that high frequency words produce more false ala...
Judgments of frequency for targets (old items) and foils (similar; dissimilar) steadily increase as ...
Manipulating either list length (e.g., few vs. many study items) or encoding strength (e.g., one pre...
Judgments of frequency for targets (old items) and foils (similar; dissimilar) steadily increase as ...
Two experiments investigated Estes and Maddox’ theory (2002) that word frequency mirror effect in ep...
Estes and Maddox (2002) suggested that the word frequency mirror effect in episodic recognition memo...
A mirror effect can be produced by manipulating word class (e.g., high vs. low frequency) or by mani...
the effect of list composition on word recognition. The predictions were empirically tested for two-...
The current study assessed whether the word frequency mirror effect in recognition memory changes ac...
A theoretical account of the mirror effect for word frequency and of dissociations in the pattern of...
A theoretical account of the mirror effect for word frequency and of dissociations in the pattern of...
The word-frequency mirror effect (more hits and fewer false alarms for low-frequency than for high-f...
Dual-process models of the word-frequency mirror effect posit that low-frequency words are recollect...
K. J. Malmberg, J. Holden, and R. M. Shiffrin (2004) reported more false alarms for low- than high-f...
high-frequency words when the foils were similar to the targets. According to the source of activati...
The word frequency mirror effect is the observation that high frequency words produce more false ala...
Judgments of frequency for targets (old items) and foils (similar; dissimilar) steadily increase as ...
Manipulating either list length (e.g., few vs. many study items) or encoding strength (e.g., one pre...
Judgments of frequency for targets (old items) and foils (similar; dissimilar) steadily increase as ...
Two experiments investigated Estes and Maddox’ theory (2002) that word frequency mirror effect in ep...
Estes and Maddox (2002) suggested that the word frequency mirror effect in episodic recognition memo...
A mirror effect can be produced by manipulating word class (e.g., high vs. low frequency) or by mani...
the effect of list composition on word recognition. The predictions were empirically tested for two-...
The current study assessed whether the word frequency mirror effect in recognition memory changes ac...