The effect of long-term working memory through personalization applied to free recall: Uncurbing the primacy-effect enthusiasm |
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Authors: | Alessandro Guida Doriane Gras Yvonnick Noel Olivier Le Bohec Christophe Quaireau Serge Nicolas |
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Affiliation: | 1. Université Rennes 2, Rennes, France 3. Centre de Recherche en Psychologie, Cognition et Communication, Université Rennes 2 – Haute Bretagne, Place du Recteur Henri Le Moal CS 24 307, Batiment S – Bureau S 509, 35 043, Rennes Cedex, France 2. Université Paris Descartes, Paris, France
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Abstract: | In this study, a personalization method (Guida, Tardieu, & Nicolas, European Journal of Cognitive Psychology, 21: 862–896 2009) was applied to a free-recall task. Fifteen pairs of words, composed of an object and a location, were presented to 93 participants, who had to mentally associate each pair and subsequently recall the objects. A 30-s delay was introduced on half of the trials, the presentation rate was manipulated (5 or 10 s per item), and verbal and visuospatial working memory tests were administered to test for their effects on the serial curve. Two groups were constituted: a personalized group, for whom the locations were well-known places on their university campus, and a nonpersonalized group, for whom the locations did not refer to known places. Since personalization putatively operationalizes long-term working memory (Ericsson & Kintsch, Psychological Review, 102: 211–245 1995)—namely, the capacity to store information reliably and rapidly in long-term memory—and if we take a dual-store approach to memory, the personalization advantage would be expected to be greater for pre-recency than for recency items. Overall, the results were compatible with long-term working memory theory. They contribute to validating the personalization method as a methodology to characterize the contribution of long-term memory storage to performance in working memory tasks. |
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