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Quite ordinary retrieval cues may determine free recall of actions

Identifieur interne : 000C72 ( PascalFrancis/Corpus ); précédent : 000C71; suivant : 000C73

Quite ordinary retrieval cues may determine free recall of actions

Auteurs : Melanie C. Steffens ; Axel Buchner ; Karl Friedrich Wender

Source :

RBID : Pascal:03-0185633

Descripteurs français

English descriptors

Abstract

Typically, action phrases like "break the match" are recalled better if participants are asked to enact the phrases than if they are just asked to remember them. This difference in recall rates is called the enactment effect. In accounts of the enactment effect, the role of differences between action phrases has remained open. In the present paper, it is hypothesized that free recall performance after enactment depends on the presence, during encoding and retrieval, of objects that are interactively encoded with actions and consequently may serve as retrieval cues. This hypothesis was tested in various ways and corroborated in three experiments. Enactment effects were consistently smaller, even non-existent, for action phrases with objects absent than for phrases where the objects are present in the experimental context during encoding and retrieval.

Notice en format standard (ISO 2709)

Pour connaître la documentation sur le format Inist Standard.

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A02 01      @0 JMLAE6
A03   1    @0 J. mem. lang. : (Print)
A05       @2 48
A06       @2 2
A08 01  1  ENG  @1 Quite ordinary retrieval cues may determine free recall of actions
A11 01  1    @1 STEFFENS (Melanie C.)
A11 02  1    @1 BUCHNER (Axel)
A11 03  1    @1 WENDER (Karl Friedrich)
A14 01      @1 Universität Trier @3 DEU @Z 1 aut. @Z 3 aut.
A14 02      @1 Heinrich-Heine-Universität @3 DEU @Z 2 aut.
A20       @1 399-415
A21       @1 2003
A23 01      @0 ENG
A43 01      @1 INIST @2 13007 @5 354000103953420080
A44       @0 0000 @1 © 2003 INIST-CNRS. All rights reserved.
A45       @0 1 p.3/4
A47 01  1    @0 03-0185633
A60       @1 P
A61       @0 A
A64 01  1    @0 Journal of memory and language : (Print)
A66 01      @0 USA
C01 01    ENG  @0 Typically, action phrases like "break the match" are recalled better if participants are asked to enact the phrases than if they are just asked to remember them. This difference in recall rates is called the enactment effect. In accounts of the enactment effect, the role of differences between action phrases has remained open. In the present paper, it is hypothesized that free recall performance after enactment depends on the presence, during encoding and retrieval, of objects that are interactively encoded with actions and consequently may serve as retrieval cues. This hypothesis was tested in various ways and corroborated in three experiments. Enactment effects were consistently smaller, even non-existent, for action phrases with objects absent than for phrases where the objects are present in the experimental context during encoding and retrieval.
C02 01  X    @0 002A26F05A
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Format Inist (serveur)

NO : PASCAL 03-0185633 INIST
ET : Quite ordinary retrieval cues may determine free recall of actions
AU : STEFFENS (Melanie C.); BUCHNER (Axel); WENDER (Karl Friedrich)
AF : Universität Trier/Allemagne (1 aut., 3 aut.); Heinrich-Heine-Universität/Allemagne (2 aut.)
DT : Publication en série; Niveau analytique
SO : Journal of memory and language : (Print); ISSN 0749-596X; Coden JMLAE6; Etats-Unis; Da. 2003; Vol. 48; No. 2; Pp. 399-415; Bibl. 1 p.3/4
LA : Anglais
EA : Typically, action phrases like "break the match" are recalled better if participants are asked to enact the phrases than if they are just asked to remember them. This difference in recall rates is called the enactment effect. In accounts of the enactment effect, the role of differences between action phrases has remained open. In the present paper, it is hypothesized that free recall performance after enactment depends on the presence, during encoding and retrieval, of objects that are interactively encoded with actions and consequently may serve as retrieval cues. This hypothesis was tested in various ways and corroborated in three experiments. Enactment effects were consistently smaller, even non-existent, for action phrases with objects absent than for phrases where the objects are present in the experimental context during encoding and retrieval.
CC : 002A26F05A
FD : Etude expérimentale; Rappel libre; Action; Mémoire; Cognition; Homme; Indice mnémonique
ED : Experimental study; Free recall; Action; Memory; Cognition; Human; Memory cue
SD : Estudio experimental; Llamada libre; Acción; Memoria; Cognición; Hombre
LO : INIST-13007.354000103953420080
ID : 03-0185633

Links to Exploration step

Pascal:03-0185633

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