Elsevier

Cognitive Psychology

Volume 10, Issue 4, October 1978, Pages 465-501
Cognitive Psychology

Recency, immediate recognition memory, and reaction time

https://doi.org/10.1016/0010-0285(78)90008-7Get rights and content

Abstract

Four classes of possible mechanisms for short-term item recognition are distinguished: (I) pure list-search, (II) direct-access activation (or trace strength) discrimination, (III) mixtures (of I and II), and (IV) response-association. Manipulations of recency, particularly of negative probe items, provide critical tests between them. Two experiments are reported using Sternberg' s 1966 varied-set reaction time paradigm, coupled with procedures intended to minimize rehearsal and control the recency of probes and memory set items. RT and error rate were greater for negative probe items that had recently been presented than for items less recently presented, and this effect increased with positive set size. In contrast, positive RT was, except for the initial item, a decreasing function of recency (= serial position), and there was no additional effect of set size per se. A brief filled delay between list and probe increased positive RT but not the slope of the set size function. These and other findings appear to reject models of Classes I and IV and, while implying some direct discrimination of an item's recency, require modification of the models of Classes II and III. The implications are discussed with respect to the relation between the two versions of Sternberg's paradigm and also in connection with facilitatory “priming” effects in memory.

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    Experiment 1 was conducted as part of work towards the author's doctoral thesis (Monsell, Note 5), supported by a training scholarship from the British Medical Research Council. Experiment 2 was run while the author, supported by a Harkness Fellowship, enjoyed the hospitality of Saul Sternberg and his laboratory at Bell Telephone Laboratories. Preparation of the paper was also supported by Bell Labs and the MRC and a preliminary report was read to the Experimental Psychology Society in January 1976.

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