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Interference and forgetting.

824

Citations

40

References

1957

Year

TLDR

Interference among tasks is widely accepted as a major contributor to forgetting, with retroactive inhibition studies showing that interference can produce substantial memory loss. The paper investigates the generalization that forgetting is largely due to interference from tasks learned after the initial learning. The author proposes to demonstrate that interference from subsequent tasks causes forgetting. Introducing an interpolated interfering task can produce marked decrements in recall within minutes in the laboratory.

Abstract

I know of no one who seriously maintains that interference among tasks is of no consequence in the production of forgetting. Whether forgetting is conceptualized at a strict psychological level or at a neural level (e.g., neural memory trace), some provision is made for interference to account for at least some of the measured forgetting. The many studies on retroactive inhibition are probably responsible for this general agreement that interference among tasks must produce a sizable proportion of forgetting. By introducing an interpolated interfering task very marked decrements in recall can be produced in a few minutes in the laboratory. But there is a second generalization which has resulted from these studies, namely, that most forgetting must be a function of the learning of tasks which interfere with that which has already been learned (19). Thus, if a single task is learned in the laboratory and retention measured after a week, the loss has been attributed to the interference from activities learned outside the laboratory during the week. It is this generalization with which I am concerned in the initial portions of this paper. Now, I cannot deny the data which show large amounts of forgetting produced by an interpolated list in a few minutes in the laboratory. Nor do I deny that this loss may be attributed to interference. But I will try to show 1 Address of the president, Midwestern Psychological Association, St. Louis, Missouri,

References

YearCitations

2013

2.8K

1954

1.2K

1953

797

1924

728

1932

487

1949

462

1940

337

1940

291

1943

242

1941

154

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