Recognition-induced forgetting does not occur for temporally grouped objects unless they are semantically related |
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Authors: | Ashleigh M. Maxcey Hannah Glenn Elisabeth Stansberry |
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Affiliation: | 1.Department of Psychology,Ohio State University,Columbus,USA;2.Department of Psychology,Vanderbilt University,Nashville,USA;3.Department of Psychology,Tennessee State University,Nashville,USA |
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Abstract: | Recent evidence has shown that practice recognizing certain objects hurts memories of objects from the same category, a phenomenon called recognition-induced forgetting. In all previous studies of this effect, the objects have been related by semantic category (e.g., instances of vases). However, the relationship between objects in many real-world visual situations stresses temporal grouping rather than semantic relations (e.g., a weapon and getaway car at a crime scene), and temporal grouping is thought to cluster items in models of long-term memory. The goal of the present study was to determine whether temporally grouped objects suffer recognition-induced forgetting. To this end, we implemented a modified recognition-induced forgetting paradigm in which the objects were temporally clustered at study. Across four experiments, we found that recognition-induced forgetting occurred only when the temporally clustered objects were also semantically related. We conclude by discussing how these findings relate to real-world vision and inform models of memory. |
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