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Process, not representation: reply to Radvansky (1999).
Authors:J R Anderson  L M Reder
Affiliation:Department of Psychology, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213, USA. ja+@cmu.edu
Abstract:The size of fan effects is determined by processes at retrieval, not by whether or not information is represented as situations. Evidence contradicts G. A. Radvansky's (1999) claim that time to retrieve information from a situation does not depend on the number of elements in the situation. Moreover, Radvansky's principles for ascribing situational models to experiments appear to be post hoc ways of redescribing the data. On the other hand, the evidence does support the Adaptive Control of Thought--Rational (ACT-R) assumption that participants can adjust their attentional weightings and so produce differential fan effects. Moreover, the ACT-R theory of the fan effect is consistent with many other findings.
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