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A limit on retrieval-induced forgetting.
65
Citations
14
References
2001
Year
Memory RetrievalUnrelated MembersNeuropsychologyCognitionPsycholinguisticsHuman MemoryExplicit MemorySocial SciencesPsychologyEpisodic MemoryRetrieval-induced ForgettingMemoryRetrieval-induced Forgetting EffectRetrieval TechniqueSemantic MemoryCognitive ScienceExperimental PsychologyImplicit MemoryAssociative Memory (Psychology)Long-term Memory
Retrieving some members of a memory set impairs later recall of semantically related but not unrelated members (M. C. Anderson, R. A. Bjork, & E. L. Bjork, 1994; M. C. Anderson & B. A. Spellman, 1995). The authors investigated whether this retrieval-induced forgetting effect would generalize to testing procedures other than category-cued recall. Although the authors demonstrated a retrieval-induced forgetting effect using a category-cued recall task, they failed to show retrieval-induced forgetting on several different memory tests that used item-specific cues, including a category-plus-stem-cued recall test, a category-plus-fragment-cued recall test, a fragment-cued recall test, and a fragment completion task.
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