Effects of comparison and the levels of processing on recall memory
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- ITOH Mariko
- University of Tsukuba
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- AYABE-KANAMURA Saho
- University of Tsukuba
Bibliographic Information
- Other Title
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- 比較と処理の水準が再生に及ぼす影響
- ヒカク ト ショリ ノ スイジュン ガ サイセイ ニ オヨボス エイキョウ
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Description
The self-choice effect states that self-selected items are more likely to be remembered than items selected by an experimenter. It has been suggested that the act of comparing among items in the self-choice condition is necessary for the self-choice effect to emerge (Itoh, Ayabe-Kanamura, & Kikuchi, 2012), but it is also possible that semantic characteristics accessed within the comparison process could facilitate memory (i.e., a levels-of-processing effect). During the incidental-study phase of our experiment, participants made comparisons of two words based on either semantic-level or non-semantic-level characteristics or made judgments about a single word at either a semantic-level or non-semantic-level. Recall performance showed a levels-of-processing effect for both conditions. More importantly, the performance results indicated a facilitating effect of making a comparison regardless of the level-of-processing. These results suggest that making comparisons between items during selection, rather than level-of-processing alone, contributes to the self-choice effect on memory.
Journal
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- The Japanese Journal of Cognitive Psychology
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The Japanese Journal of Cognitive Psychology 10 (2), 175-182, 2013
The Japanese Society for Cognitive Psychology
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Details 詳細情報について
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- CRID
- 1390001205338125824
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- NII Article ID
- 130003373969
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- NII Book ID
- AA11971335
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- ISSN
- 21850321
- 13487264
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- NDL BIB ID
- 024419611
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- Text Lang
- ja
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- Data Source
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- JaLC
- NDL Search
- Crossref
- CiNii Articles
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- Abstract License Flag
- Disallowed