Recognition failures and free-recall failures: Implications for the relation between recall and recognition |
| |
Authors: | John M. Gardiner |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Memory & Cognition Research Group, The City University, Northampton Square, EC1V OHB, London, England
|
| |
Abstract: | Experiments showing that in cued recall subjects can recall words that they had previously failed to recognize have been taken to refute generate-recognize theories of recall, for those theories predict that recall is dependent on recognition. None of these experiments, however, has provided an appropriate test of Bahrick’s (1970, 1979) generate-recognize theory, which explicitly refers to words that are accessible to cued recall but not to free recall, that is, tofree-recall failures. When the experimental procedure was modified so as to provide tests of this theory, no evidence was found of any greater dependency between recall and recognition of free-recall failures than between recall and recognition overall. Free-recall failures do not, therefore, constitute any exception to many previous experimental findings that conform with the Tulving-Wiseman law, and so the account offered by Bahrick’s generate-recognize theory may be rejected. The results also suggest an explanation for some other conflicting evidence on whether recall and recognition are dependent or independent. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录! |
|