Analysis of memory codes and cumulative rehearsal in observational learning |
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Authors: | Albert Bandura Robert Jeffery Daniel L. Bachicha |
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Affiliation: | Stanford University USA |
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Abstract: | The present study examined the influence of memory codes varying in meaningfulness and retrievability and cumulative rehearsal on retention of observationally learned responses over increasing temporal intervals. Symbolic codes combining meaningfulness with retrievability produced superior memory performances, but responses were poorly retained in symbolic representations containing only one of these properties. Individual response analysis further confirmed that the more meaningful the codes incorporating retrieval guides the better are modeled responses learned and retained. Cumulative rehearsal had differential effects on memory performances depending upon the serial input position of the responses and the form into which the modeled behavior was encoded. Code rehearsals facilitated retention of early and intermediate responses which were repeated more than later ones, but this was true mainly for codes vulnerable to loss. The overall findings provide further corroborative evidence that memory performances are governed more by information coding than by associative strengthening processes. |
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Keywords: | Requests for reprints should be sent to Albert Bandura Department of Psychology Stanford University Stanford CA 94305. |
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