Levels of processing influences both recollection and familiarity: Evidence from a modified remember-know paradigm.

Heather Sheridan, Eyal M Reingold

Department of Psychology, University of Toronto at Mississauga, Ontario, Canada L5L 1C6.

Journal Article: Consciousness and Cognition (impact factor: 2.14). 11/2011; 21(1):438-43. DOI: 10.1016/j.concog.2011.09.022

Abstract

A modified Remember/Know (RK) paradigm was used to investigate reported subjective awareness during retrieval. Levels of processing (shallow vs. deep) was manipulated at study. Word pairs (old/new or new/new) were presented during test trials, and participants were instructed to respond "remember" if they recollected one of the two words, "know" if the word was familiar in the absence of recollection, or "new" if they judged both words to be new. Participants were then required to indicate which of the 2 words was old (2AFC recognition). With the standard RK proportions, deeper processing at study increased remember proportions and decreased know proportions, but this dissociation was not shown with the 2AFC proportion correct measure which instead demonstrated robust LOP effects for both remember and know trials, suggesting that the know proportion measure severely distorts the nature of LOP effects on familiarity.

Source: PubMed

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Keywords

2 words
 
2AFC proportion correct measure
 
2AFC recognition
 
deeper processing
 
demonstrated robust LOP effects
 
know proportion measure
 
LOP effects
 
modified Remember/Know
 
old/new
 
participants
 
proportions
 
recollection
 
RK
 
standard RK proportions
 
subjective awareness
 
test trials
 
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two words
 
Word pairs
 
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