In defense of the signal detection interpretation of remember/know judgments

Donaldson (1996) argued that remember/know judgments can be conceptualized within a signal detection framework by assuming that they are based on two criteria situated along a strength-of-memory decision axis. According to this model, items that exceed a high criterion receive a remember response, whereas items that only exceed a lower criterion receive a know response. Although a variety of findings have been presented in evidence against this idea, Dunn (2004) recently showed that detection theory is fully compatible with those findings. We present a variety of new results and new analyses that weigh strongly in favor of the detection interpretation. We further show that a dual-process account of recognition memory is compatible with a unidimensional detection model despite the common notion that such a model necessarily assumes a single process. The key assumption of this model is that individual recognition decisions are based on both recollection and familiarity (not on one process or the other).

[1]  A P Yonelinas,et al.  Consciousness, control, and confidence: the 3 Cs of recognition memory. , 2001, Journal of experimental psychology. General.

[2]  D. Schacter,et al.  False recognition and the right frontal lobe: A case study , 1996, Neuropsychologia.

[3]  W. Donaldson,et al.  The role of decision processes in remembering and knowing , 1996, Memory & cognition.

[4]  R Ratcliff,et al.  Testing global memory models using ROC curves. , 1992, Psychological review.

[5]  K. McDermott,et al.  Creating false memories: Remembering words not presented in lists. , 1995 .

[6]  R T Knight,et al.  Recollection and familiarity deficits in amnesia: convergence of remember-know, process dissociation, and receiver operating characteristic data. , 1998, Neuropsychology.

[7]  J. Dunn Remember-know: a matter of confidence. , 2004, Psychological review.

[8]  R. Ratcliff,et al.  Retrieval Processes in Recognition Memory , 1976 .

[9]  J. Wixted,et al.  On the difference between strength-based and frequency-based mirror effects in recognition memory. , 1998, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[10]  A P Yonelinas,et al.  Predicting individual false alarm rates and signal detection theory: A role for remembering , 2000, Memory & cognition.

[11]  F. Bellezza,et al.  The detection model of recognition using know and remember judgments , 1998, Memory & cognition.

[12]  A. Yonelinas,et al.  Signal-Detection, Threshold, and Dual-Process Models of Recognition Memory: ROCs and Conscious Recollection , 1996, Consciousness and Cognition.

[13]  J. Gardiner,et al.  Awareness of Recognition Memory for Polish and English Folk Songs in Polish and English Folk , 1999 .

[14]  C. L. Raye,et al.  Source ROCs are (typically) curvilinear: comment on Yonelinas (1999). , 2001, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[15]  Suparna Rajaram,et al.  Distinguishing states of awareness from confidence during retrieval: Evidence from amnesia , 2002, Cognitive, affective & behavioral neuroscience.

[16]  J T Wixted,et al.  On the nature of associative information in recognition memory. , 2001, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[17]  Craig E. L. Stark,et al.  When zero is not zero: The problem of ambiguous baseline conditions in fMRI , 2001, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[18]  V. Gregg,et al.  Impact of encoding depth on awareness of perceptual effects in recognition memory , 2001, Memory & cognition.

[19]  Joseph R. Manns,et al.  Recognition Memory and the Human Hippocampus , 2003, Neuron.

[20]  Jason L Hicks,et al.  The role of recollection and partial information in source monitoring. , 2002, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[21]  B. Knowlton,et al.  Remembering episodes: a selective role for the hippocampus during retrieval , 2000, Nature Neuroscience.

[22]  E. Tulving Memory and consciousness. , 1985 .

[23]  A. Heathcote Item Recognition Memory and the ROC , 2003 .

[24]  L R Squire,et al.  Remembering and knowing: two different expressions of declarative memory. , 1995, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[25]  F. Bellezza,et al.  A comparison of the multimemory and detection theories of know and remember recognition judgments. , 2001, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[26]  W P Banks,et al.  Recognition and Source Memory as Multivariate Decision Processes , 2000, Psychological science.

[27]  C D Creelman,et al.  Triangles in ROC space: History and theory of “nonparametric” measures of sensitivity and response bias , 1996, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[28]  John M. Gardiner,et al.  Recognition memory and awareness: A large effect of study-test modalities on "know" responses following a highly perceptual orienting task , 1994 .

[29]  Robert T. Knight,et al.  Effects of extensive temporal lobe damage or mild hypoxia on recollection and familiarity , 2002, Nature Neuroscience.

[30]  Daniel L. Schacter,et al.  False recognition after a right frontal lobe infarction: Memory for general and specific information , 1997, Neuropsychologia.

[31]  G. Mandler Recognizing: The judgment of previous occurrence. , 1980 .

[32]  L. Reder,et al.  A dual-process account of the list-length and strength-based mirror effects in recognition , 2003 .

[33]  R. Marsh,et al.  Remember-know judgments can depend on how memory is tested , 1999, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[34]  J. Gardiner,et al.  Recollective experience in word and nonword recognition , 1990, Memory & cognition.

[35]  R. Shiffrin,et al.  Turning up the noise or turning down the volume? On the nature of the impairment of episodic recognition memory by midazolam. , 2004, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[36]  A. Yonelinas The Nature of Recollection and Familiarity: A Review of 30 Years of Research , 2002 .

[37]  E. Hirshman,et al.  The Role of Decision Processes in Conscious Recollection , 1998 .

[38]  G. Mandler,et al.  Retrieval processes in recognition , 1974, Memory & cognition.

[39]  J. R. Vokey,et al.  Illusory Recollection and Dual–Process Models of Recognition Memory , 2004, The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology. A, Human experimental psychology.

[40]  V. Gregg,et al.  Recognition memory with little or no remembering: Implications for a detection model , 1997 .

[41]  Alan Richardson-Klavehn,et al.  Recognition memory and decision processes: A meta-analysis of remember, know, and guess responses , 2002, Memory.

[42]  E. Hirshman,et al.  Modeling the conscious correlates of recognition memory: Reflections on the remember-know paradigm , 1997, Memory & cognition.

[43]  Barbara J Knowlton,et al.  The effect of testing procedure on remember-know judgments , 2002, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[44]  L. Squire,et al.  Recall and recognition are equally impaired in patients with selective hippocampal damage , 2004, Cognitive, affective & behavioral neuroscience.

[45]  M. Glanzer,et al.  Slope of the receiver-operating characteristic in recognition memory. , 1999 .

[46]  Michael E Hasselmo,et al.  Scopolamine impairs human recognition memory: data and modeling. , 2003, Behavioral neuroscience.

[47]  Neil A. Macmillan,et al.  Detection Theory: A User's Guide , 1991 .

[48]  J. Gardiner Functional aspects of recollective experience , 1988, Memory & cognition.

[49]  J. Gardiner,et al.  Transferring voice effects in recognition memory from remembering to knowing , 2003, Memory & cognition.

[50]  On the Utility of the Signal Detection Model of the Remember–Know Paradigm , 1998, Consciousness and Cognition.

[51]  A comparison of the multimemory and detection theories of know and remember recognition judgments. , 2001, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[52]  A. Richardson-Klavehn,et al.  Limitations of the Signal Detection Model of the Remember-Know Paradigm: A Reply to Hirshman , 1998, Consciousness and Cognition.

[53]  Ramona O Hopkins,et al.  Semantic Memory and the Human Hippocampus , 2003, Neuron.

[54]  Andrew Heathcote,et al.  Item recognition memory and the receiver operating characteristic. , 2003, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[55]  Suparna Rajaram,et al.  Remembering and knowing: Two means of access to the personal past , 1993, Memory & cognition.

[56]  M. Glanzer,et al.  The regularities of recognition memory. , 1993, Psychological review.

[57]  Barbara L. Chalfonte,et al.  Sum-Difference Theory of Remembering and Knowing : A Two-Dimensional Signal-Detection Model By : , 2004 .