Publication | Closed Access
Influence of Multiple-Day Temporal Distribution of Repetitions on Memory: A Comparison of Uniform, Expanding, and Contracting Schedules
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Citations
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References
2011
Year
NeurolinguisticsCognitionPsycholinguisticsUniform SchedulesAttentionHuman MemoryLanguage LearningSocial SciencesTemporal SchedulesEpisodic MemoryLanguage AcquisitionMemoryWorking MemoryLanguage StudiesMultiple DaysRetrieval TechniqueCognitive ScienceMemory SystemMemory ConsolidationExperimental PsychologyStorage (Memory)MnemonicProcedural MemoryNeuroscienceContracting SchedulesMultiple-day Temporal DistributionLong-term MemoryLinguistics
Very few studies have examined the influence of schedules of repetitions across multiple days (e.g., Tsai, 1927 ). Three temporal schedules of four presentations of pseudoword/word pairs over a 7-day learning period were compared: a uniform (presentations on Days 1, 3, 5, and 7), an expanding (1, 2, 3, 7), and a contracting (1, 5, 6, 7) schedule. Schedule was a within-subjects variable. Experiment 1 was performed on the Internet and showed that cued recall on Day 9 led to higher scores for the stimuli of the expanding schedule. Experiment 2 was performed in the laboratory and showed that the expanding and the uniform schedules led to the highest scores on Day 9. A recognition task performed during the learning phase revealed that stimuli recognized at the time of their repetition were more likely to be retrieved later than the others. Our results are discussed within the framework of the study-phase retrieval and encoding variability theories.
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