Perceptual interference at encoding enhances recall for high- but not low-imageability words |
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Authors: | Neil W. Mulligan |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Psychology, Southern Methodist University, 75275-0442, Dallas, TX
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Abstract: | Interfering with stimulus perception during encoding can improve later explicit memory (the perceptual-interference effect). The compensatory-processing hypothesis attributes the perceptualinterference effect to enhanced processing of higher level (nonvisual) information during perception. Recent research indicates that the semantic dimension of imageability is one type of higher level information that plays a role in word perception. To the extent that semantic representations play a more important role in the perception of high- than for low-imageability words, the compensatoryprocessing hypothesis predicts a larger perceptual-interference effect for high- than for lowimageability words. Two experiments confirm this prediction. A robust effect of perceptual interference was found for high- but not for low-imageability words. |
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