Dissociable Lexical and Phonological Influences on Serial Recognition and Serial Recall
Open Access
- 1 February 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A
- Vol. 54 (1) , 1-30
- https://doi.org/10.1080/02724980042000002
Abstract
The impact of the lexicality of memory items on memory performance was compared in two paradigms, serial recall and serial recognition. Experiments 1 to 3 tested 7- and 8-year-old children. Memory accuracy was only mildly impaired in lists containing nonwords compared with words in a serial recognition task involving judgements of whether the items in two sequences were in the same order (Experiment 1), although a substantial advantage for word over nonword items from the same stimulus pool was found in serial recall (Experiment 2). A stronger influence of lexicality on serial recall than serial recognition was further demonstrated in Experiments 3A and 3B, and in 4A and 4B using adult participants. These experiments also established comparable degrees of sensitivity to the phonological similarity of the memory sequences in the two paradigms. The phonological similarity effect in serial recall was found to arise from increased phoneme order errors, whereas the lexicality effect was due principally to the greater frequency of phoneme identity errors for nonwords. It is proposed that the lexicality effect originates in the redintegration of item information just prior to recall, and that this process is largely bypassed in serial recognition.Keywords
This publication has 42 references indexed in Scilit:
- Memory for serial order: A network model of the phonological loop and its timing.Psychological Review, 1999
- The primacy model: A new model of immediate serial recall.Psychological Review, 1998
- Effects of word length and wordlikeness on pseudoword repetition by poor and normal readersApplied Psycholinguistics, 1997
- Unchained Memory: Error Patterns Rule out Chaining Models of Immediate Serial RecallThe Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A, 1996
- Unchained Memory: Error Patterns Rule out Chaining Models of Immediate Serial RecallThe Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A, 1996
- Dissociations between speech perception and phonological short-term memory deficitsCognitive Neuropsychology, 1992
- Are there distinct input and output buffers? Evidence from an aphasic patient with an impaired output bufferLanguage and Cognitive Processes, 1992
- Words, nonwords, and phonological processes: Some comments on Gathercole, Willis, Emslie, and BaddeleyApplied Psycholinguistics, 1991
- Word frequency, articulatory suppression and memory spanBritish Journal of Psychology, 1989
- Acoustic similarity and intrusion errors in short-term memory.Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1965