For more than a century, an immense interest has been devoted to the study of recognition memory, where a multitude of memory phenomena has been explained. Recognition memory is usually described with parsimonious measurement and statistical models, stemming from dual process theory and signal detection theory. In the present thesis, the most often used models of recognition memory are reviewed and compared to a novel implementation of the variance theory, abbreviated the VT (Sikström, 2001) in the account of frequency and familiarity effects, and a new model of item variability (the multidimensional signal detection theory, abbreviated the MSDT). The focus of the thesis lies on the effects of prior knowledge on recognition memory, investig...
Episodic recognition memory experiments attempt to determine the processes that underlie recognition...
Recognition memory can be supported by the processes of recollection and familiarity. Recollection i...
Dual-process models of recognition often assume that one retrieval process, generating a familiarity...
Recognition memory is the ability to consciously appreciate that an item or event was previously pre...
Recognition memory is the ability to judge whether a given stimulus has previously been encountered....
The development of formal models has aided theoretical progress in recognition memory research. Here...
The relationship between recognition memory and repetition priming remains unclear. Priming is belie...
Threshold- and signal-detection-based models have dominated theorizing about recogni-tion memory. Bu...
Theories of recognition have shifted from a single process approach to a dual-process view, which d...
In recognition, remember responses are understood to be based on recollection and know responses are...
Dual-process models of recognition memory propose that recognition memory can be supported by either...
Recent interest has been drawn to the separate components of recognition memory, as studied by event...
Within the literature of psychological and decision sciences, there is a critical difference in the ...
Four linked experiments were run in order to understand the relationship between frequency judgment ...
This thesis examines two aspects of human recognition memory by using two separate behavioral paradi...
Episodic recognition memory experiments attempt to determine the processes that underlie recognition...
Recognition memory can be supported by the processes of recollection and familiarity. Recollection i...
Dual-process models of recognition often assume that one retrieval process, generating a familiarity...
Recognition memory is the ability to consciously appreciate that an item or event was previously pre...
Recognition memory is the ability to judge whether a given stimulus has previously been encountered....
The development of formal models has aided theoretical progress in recognition memory research. Here...
The relationship between recognition memory and repetition priming remains unclear. Priming is belie...
Threshold- and signal-detection-based models have dominated theorizing about recogni-tion memory. Bu...
Theories of recognition have shifted from a single process approach to a dual-process view, which d...
In recognition, remember responses are understood to be based on recollection and know responses are...
Dual-process models of recognition memory propose that recognition memory can be supported by either...
Recent interest has been drawn to the separate components of recognition memory, as studied by event...
Within the literature of psychological and decision sciences, there is a critical difference in the ...
Four linked experiments were run in order to understand the relationship between frequency judgment ...
This thesis examines two aspects of human recognition memory by using two separate behavioral paradi...
Episodic recognition memory experiments attempt to determine the processes that underlie recognition...
Recognition memory can be supported by the processes of recollection and familiarity. Recollection i...
Dual-process models of recognition often assume that one retrieval process, generating a familiarity...