Repeated priming increases memory accessibility in infants |
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Authors: | Bearce Karen Hildreth Rovee-Collier Carolyn |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ 08854, USA. |
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Abstract: | In previous research on priming (reactivation) with 3-month-olds, two primes recovered a forgotten memory faster than one, suggesting that prior priming had increased the accessibility of the forgotten memory. Exploiting the fact that the minimum duration of a prime indexes the accessibility of the forgotten memory, we currently examined whether prior priming also reduces the minimum effective prime duration. In three experiments, 60 3-month-olds learned an operant task, forgot it, and then were exposed to successive primes either 1 day and 1 week after forgetting (Experiment 1) or 1 and 2 weeks after forgetting (Experiment 2). In both cases, prior priming reduced the minimum duration of the second prime, a result that was independent of the duration of the first prime (Experiment 3). These findings confirm that priming increases the accessibility of a latent memory and raise the possibility that repeated priming underlies the extended memorability of persons and events that infants encounter sporadically. |
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Keywords: | Reactivation Priming Prime duration Infancy Forgetting Memory retrieval Memory accessibility Repetition effects |
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