Contributions of survey research to the understanding of memory
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] E. Loftus,et al. Retrieving Multiple Autobiographical Memories , 1985 .
[2] R. Tourangeau,et al. Evaluation of data collection frequency and the use of a summary in the National Medical Care Utilization and Expenditure Survey , 1987 .
[3] E F Loftus,et al. Since the eruption of Mt. St. Helens, has anyone beaten you up? Improving the accuracy of retrospective reports with landmarkevents , 1983, Memory & cognition.
[4] D. Herrmann,et al. There is more to episodic memory than just episodes , 1992 .
[5] L Hasher,et al. Automatic processing of fundamental information: the case of frequency of occurrence. , 1984, The American psychologist.
[6] Seymour Sudman,et al. Improving Interview Method and Questionnaire Design: Response Effects to Threatening Questions in Survey Research. , 1980 .
[7] R S Nickerson,et al. Retrieval inhibition from part-set cuing: A persisting enigma in memory research , 1984, Memory & cognition.
[8] L. Rips,et al. Answering autobiographical questions: the impact of memory and inference on surveys. , 1987, Science.
[9] D. Gentner,et al. Studies of inference from lack of knowledge , 1981, Memory & cognition.
[10] E F Loftus,et al. Recall strategies and memory for health-care visits. , 1990, The Milbank quarterly.
[11] B. Shanon. Have you been to Paris , 1979 .
[12] Alan Searleman,et al. Memory from a Broader Perspective , 1994 .
[13] Cohen Sb,et al. Data collection frequency effect in the National Medical Care Expenditure Survey. , 1985 .
[14] J. Jobe,et al. Retrieval from memory of dietary information , 1991 .
[15] W. Friedman. Memory for the time of past events. , 1993 .
[16] A D Baddeley,et al. Telescoping is not time compression: A model , 1989, Memory & cognition.
[17] J. Krosnick. Response strategies for coping with the cognitive demands of attitude measures in surveys , 1991 .
[18] M. Watkins,et al. Recall of a twice-presented item without recall of either presentation: generic memory for events , 1985 .
[19] W. Whitten,et al. Directed search through autobiographical memory , 1981, Memory & cognition.
[20] M. McCloskey,et al. Decisions about Ignorance: Knowing That You Don't Know. , 1981 .
[21] E. Blair,et al. Cognitive Processes Used by Survey Respondents to Answer Behavioral Frequency Questions , 1987 .
[22] L. Hedges,et al. Reports of elapsed time: bounding and rounding processes in estimation. , 1990 .
[23] J. Jobe,et al. Question-induced cognitive biases in reports of dietary intake by college men and women. , 1991, Health psychology : official journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association.
[24] Robert S. Siegler,et al. Metrics and Mappings: A Framework for Understanding Real-World Quantitative Estimation. , 1993 .
[25] A. Laurent,et al. Reporting health events in household interviews. Effects of an extensive questionnaire and a diary procedure. , 1972, Vital and health statistics. Series 2, Data evaluation and methods research.
[26] E. Tulving. Elements of episodic memory , 1983 .
[27] Larry V. Hedges,et al. Hierarchical organization in ordered domains: Estimating the dates of events , 1988 .
[28] Daniel Kahneman,et al. Availability: A heuristic for judging frequency and probability , 1973 .
[29] Charles F. Cannel. A Summary of Studies of Interviewing Methodology. Vital and Health Statistics: Series 2, Data Evaluation and Methods Research; No. 69. DHEW Publication No. (HRA) 77-1343. , 1977 .
[30] N. Auriat,et al. “MY WIFE KNOWS BEST” A COMPARISON OF EVENT DATING ACCURACY BETWEEN THE WIFE, THE HUSBAND, THE COUPLE, AND THE BELGIUM POPULATION REGISTER , 1993 .
[31] N. Auriat. Who forgets? An analysis of memory effects in a retrospective survey on migration history , 1991, European journal of population = Revue europeenne de demographie.
[32] J. Jobe,et al. Cognition and survey measurement: History and overview , 1991 .
[33] Madow Wg. Interview data on chronic conditions compared with information derived from medical records. , 1967 .
[34] J. Neter,et al. A Study of Response Errors in Expenditures Data from Household Interviews , 1964 .
[35] Lance J Rips,et al. The subjective dates of natural events in very-long-term memory , 1985, Cognitive Psychology.
[36] Scot Burton,et al. TASK CONDITIONS, RESPONSE FORMULATION PROCESSES, AND RESPONSE ACCURACY FOR BEHAVIORAL FREQUENCY QUESTIONS IN SURVEYS , 1991 .
[37] L. Freeman,et al. Cognitive Structure and Informant Accuracy , 1987 .
[38] A. Laurent,et al. Reporting health events in household interviews: effects of reinforcement, question length, and reinterviews. , 1972, Vital and health statistics. Series 2, Data evaluation and methods research.
[39] Seymour Sudman,et al. Effects of Time and Memory Factors on Response in Surveys , 1973 .
[40] Seymour Sudman,et al. The Use of Bounded Recall Procedures in Single Interviews , 1984 .
[41] Percy G. Gray,et al. The Memory Factor in Social Surveys , 1955 .
[42] John J. Skowronski,et al. Telescoping in dating naturally occurring events , 1988, Memory & cognition.
[43] Barbara Means,et al. When personal history repeats itself: Decomposing memories for recurring events , 1991 .
[44] W. Wagenaar. My memory: A study of autobiographical memory over six years , 1986, Cognitive Psychology.
[45] Peter V. Miller,et al. Research on Interviewing Techniques , 1981 .
[46] Elizabeth F. Loftus,et al. A TALE OF TWO QUESTIONS: BENEFITS OF ASKING MORE THAN ONE QUESTION , 1990 .
[47] E. Blair,et al. Characteristics of interval-based estimates of autobiographical frequencies , 1991 .
[48] Lance J. Rips,et al. Public memories and their personal context , 1986 .