Publication | Closed Access
The spacing effect, free recall, and two-process theory: A closer look.
62
Citations
33
References
2002
Year
Memory RetrievalCognitive ScienceVisual CognitionAssociative Memory (Psychology)Free RecallTwo-process TheoryMemorySpacing EffectCognitionPsycholinguisticsContextual-variability SubtheorySocial SciencesChunking (Psychology)AttentionHuman MemoryExperimental PsychologyExplicit MemoryPsychology
Two experiments used procedures similar to those used by R. L. Greene (1989) to test the 2-process theory of the spacing effect and, in particular, the contextual-variability subtheory that applies to free-recall performance. Experiment 1 obtained a spacing effect in free recall following intentional learning but not following incidental learning, contrary to a previous result supporting the 2-process theory. Experiment 2 replicated the incidental-learning results when a slow presentation rate was used. However, with a faster presentation rate, a spacing effect was obtained, and performance exceeded that of the slow-presentation-rate condition at the longest lag. Neither the contextual-variability subtheory of 2-process theory nor an alternative deficient-processing hypothesis was able to account for all of the data.
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