Hypermnesia Occurs in Recall but Not in Recognition
- 1 January 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by University of Illinois Press in The American Journal of Psychology
- Vol. 100 (2) , 145-165
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1422400
Abstract
Two experiments investigated the effect of encoding conditions and type of test (recall vs. recognition) on the phenomenon of hypermnesia (improved performance across repeated tests). Subjects in Experiment 1 studied a list of words using either imaginal or semantic elaboration strategies and then received three successive tests. Different groups of subjects received either free recall, four-alternative forced-choice recognition, or yes no recognition tests. Reliable hypermnesia was found only in the recall conditions, with the recognition conditions showing either no change in performance levels across tests (forced-choice tests) or significant forgetting (yes/no tests). In Experiment 2, subjects studied a list of words, and encoding was manipulated using three orienting tasks. Once again, hypermnesia was found with the recall tests but not with the forced choice recognition tests. Finding hypermnesia in recall but not in recognition indicates that retrieval processes in recall play a major role in producing hypermnesia. Also, the finding that the magnitude of the recall hypermnesia increased with an increase in total cumulative recall levels across study conditions suggests that cumulative recall levels are an important factor in determining the presence or absence of recall hypermnesia.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- SAM: A Theory of Probabilistic Search of Associative MemoryPsychology of Learning and Motivation, 1980
- Memory organization during children's repeated recall.Developmental Psychology, 1978
- Memory SearchPublished by Elsevier ,1970
- Models for Free Recall and RecognitionPublished by Elsevier ,1970