The sources of visual recency: Movement and language in serial recall |
| |
Authors: | Ruth Campbell Barbara Dodd Jane Brasher |
| |
Affiliation: | a Department of Psychology, University College, Londonb Sub Department of Speech Science, University of Newcastle upon Tyne, |
| |
Abstract: | Four experiments examine the importance of movement—the sequential ordering of stimulus features—in producing recency in the ordered serial recall of visual lists. The written recall of handsigns produced more recency when they were seen moving than still (Experiment I). Number lists presented as moving bar figures showed more recency than numbers which were displayed in the normal way with all features displayed simultaneously (Experiment II). The order in which features of abstract shapes are displayed can, itself, determine recency (Experiment III). However, a final experiment showed that still lip pictures of speech sounds generate more recency than letters representing those speech sounds. Therefore movement of stimulus features need not account for the extensive recency advantage in remembering lipread lists. The theoretical implications of these findings are discussed. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 InformaWorld 等数据库收录! |
|