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A developmental study of the effect of familiarity on short-term visual memory
Authors:Frederick J Morrison  Deborah Lott Holmes  Marshall M Haith
Affiliation:Dartmouth College USA;Harvard University USA;University of Denver USA
Abstract:An attempt was made to specify whether previously reported limitations on young children's full-report capacity lay in a smaller amount of available information, in a shorter trace duration of information in visual information storage (VIS), or in poorer coding of information into permanent storage. Five- and 8-year-olds and adults were shown an eight-item array of figures. followed at varying intervals by an indicator signaling the subject to report the figure to which the indicator had pointed. The effects of three levels of familiarity or “labelability” were examined. While no age differences were revealed in amount of information available nor in the trace duration of information in VIS, strong age differences emerged in coding of information into permanent storage. Data on latency to verbal labeling and familiarity suggested that verbal labeling could not account for the age trends. Rather, the differences seemed to lie in the use of organized visual coding and rehearsal strategies by adults and their relative lack of use by children.
Keywords:Requests for reprints should be sent to Frederick J. Morrison   Department of Psychology   Dartmouth College   Hanover   NH 03755.
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