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The ambiguity of recognition memory tests of schema theories
Authors:Anne Locksley   Charles Stangor   Christine Hepburn  Ellen GrosovskyMariann Hochstrasser
Affiliation:New York University USA;Pitzer College USA;New York University USA
Abstract:The majority of theories about the effects of schemata (or generic knowledge structures) on information processing share two fundamental assumptions. It is assumed, first, that schema-based inferences about unobserved features of an event are generated, and, second, that such inferences are stored in long-term memory and thereby confused with traces of observed features of that event. To test these assumptions, researchers rely heavily on recognition memory measures of hit and false alarm rates. In the present paper, it is observed that schema theoretic interpretations of recognition memory measures are inconsistent with an interpretation jointly derived from the theory of signal detection and Mandler's (1980, Psychological Review, 87, 252–271) subjective familiarity theory of recognition memory; from the latter's perspective, recognition memory measures are considerably more ambiguous than schema researchers realize and do not necessarily support the typical schema theoretic interpretations. Data from four experiments are analyzed from the perspective of the theory of signal detection/ subjective familiarity model and demonstrate the ambiguity of recognition memory measures for testing hypotheses about the function and consequences of schemata for information processing.
Keywords:Requests for reprints should be sent to Anne Locksley   Department of Psychology   6 Washington Place   Room 793   New York   NY 10003.
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