Directed forgetting of related words: evidence for the inefficient inhibition hypothesis |
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Authors: | Lehman Elyse Brauch Srokowski Sally A Hall Laura C Renkey Mary E Cruz Carmen A |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, George Mason University, Fairfax, VA 22030, USA. elehman@gmu.edu |
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Abstract: | Fifth-grade children and college students were asked to remember some words and to forget others in an item-cued-directed-forgetting task. Taxonomically related pairs of words and control pairs that were unrelated in meaning were used as stimuli. Children found it more difficult than did adults to ignore forget-cued words that followed associatively related words that were remember-cued. The results provide support for D. F. Bjorklund and K. K. Harnishfeger's (1990) inefficient inhibition hypothesis (i.e., that the efficiency of inhibitory mechanisms improves as children develop). The results also suggest that the inhibition is occurring primarily in the early stages of processing. |
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