The auditory recency advantage in longer term free recall is not enhanced by recalling prerecency items first |
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Authors: | John M. Gardiner Margaret M. Gardiner Vernon H. Gregg |
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Affiliation: | 1. Psychology Division, The City, University, Northampton Square, EC1V 0HB, London, England 2. Birkbeck College, University of London, London, England
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Abstract: | Gardiner and Gregg (1979) showed that in a free-recall paradigm in which each list word is embedded in a continuous stream of subject-vocalized distractor activity, recency recall was greater when the words were presented auditorily rather than visually. The experiment described here showed that this auditory advantage persisted even when list and distractor items were both spoken at a controlled pace by the experimenter, and that it was little influenced by instructions to give priority in recall either to the beginning or to the end of the list. These results strengthen the conclusion that this effect cannot be accommodated by any echoic memory theory and, because the effect was not enhanced when prerecency items were recalled first, demonstrate an additional difference between it and the somewhat similar auditory advantage found in immediate recall. |
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