Role of generalized and episode specific memories in the word frequency effect in recognition.

Frequency, recency, and type of prior exposure to very low-and high-frequency words were manipulated in a 3-phase (i.e., familiarization training, study, and test) design. Increasing the frequency with which a definition for a very low-frequency word was provided during familiarization facilitated the word's recognition in both yes-no (Experiment 1) and forced-choice paradigms (Experiment 2). Recognition of very low-frequency words not accompanied by a definition during familiarization first increased, then decreased as familiarization frequency increased (Experiment I). Reasons for these differences were investigated in Experiment 3 using judgments of recency and frequency. Results suggested that prior familiarization of a very low-frequency word with its definition may allow a more adequate episodic representation of the word to be formed during a subsequent study trial. Theoretical implications of these results for current models of memory are discussed.

[1]  Kevin J. Hawley,et al.  Contribution of perceptual fluency to recognition judgments. , 1991, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[2]  V. Gregg Word frequency, recognition and recall. , 1976 .

[3]  J. Simpson,et al.  The Oxford English Dictionary , 1884 .

[4]  J. Carroll,et al.  Word Frequency and Age of Acquisition as Determiners of Picture-Naming Latency , 1973 .

[5]  M Glanzer,et al.  An analysis of interference in recognition memory , 1983, Memory & cognition.

[6]  G. Davies,et al.  Memory in context : context in memory , 1990 .

[7]  M Glanzer,et al.  The mirror effect in recognition memory , 1984, Memory & cognition.

[8]  John Brown,et al.  Recall and Recognition , 1976 .

[9]  Neil W. Mulligan,et al.  Measuring the bases of recognition memory: An investigation of the process-dissociation framework , 1997 .

[10]  D. Stephen Lindsay,et al.  The Process-Dissociation Procedure and Similarity: Defining and Estimating Recollection and Familiarity in Recognition Memory , 1997 .

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

[12]  Marcel Kinsbourne,et al.  The mechanism of the word-frequency effect on recognition memory , 1974 .

[13]  W T Maddox,et al.  Interactions of stimulus attributes, base rates, and feedback in recognition. , 1995, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[14]  M. Glanzer,et al.  Analysis of the word-frequency effect in recognition memory , 1976 .

[15]  L. Jacoby A process dissociation framework: Separating automatic from intentional uses of memory , 1991 .

[16]  R. Shepard Recognition memory for words, sentences, and pictures , 1967 .

[17]  Arthur I. Schulman,et al.  Memory for rare words previously rated for familiarity. , 1976 .

[18]  E. Tulving Elements of episodic memory , 1983 .

[19]  A. Gorman Recognition memory for nouns as a function of abstractness and frequency. , 1961, Journal of experimental psychology.

[20]  Jin Fan,et al.  The sensory match effect in recognition memory: Perceptual fluency or episodic trace? , 1996, Memory & cognition.

[21]  George O. Goodman,et al.  The word-frequency paradox in recognition , 1982, Memory & cognition.

[22]  N. Chater,et al.  Rational models of cognition , 1998 .

[23]  S. Gronlund,et al.  Global matching models of recognition memory: How the models match the data , 1996, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[24]  David H. Krantz,et al.  Learning, memory, and thinking , 1974 .

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

[26]  David A. Balota,et al.  Test-Expectancy and Word-Frequency Effects in Recall and Recognition , 1980 .

[27]  J D Gabrieli,et al.  Dissociations between familiarity processes in explicit recognition and implicit perceptual memory. , 1997, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[28]  L. Jacoby,et al.  On the relationship between autobiographical memory and perceptual learning. , 1981, Journal of experimental psychology. General.

[29]  L. R. Allen,et al.  The influence of word-knowledge on the word-frequency effect in recognition memory , 1968 .

[30]  Benton J. Underwood,et al.  Testing effects in the recognition of words , 1970 .

[31]  P. D. Mccormack,et al.  Recognition memory for common and rare words. , 1972, Journal of experimental psychology.

[32]  B Earhard,et al.  Determinants of the word-frequency effect in recognition memory , 1982, Memory & cognition.

[33]  Benton J. Underwood,et al.  Relative frequency judgments and verbal discrimination learning , 1970 .

[34]  Felicia A. Huppert,et al.  The Role of Trace Strength in Recency and Frequency Judgements by Amnesic and Control Subjects , 1978, The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology.

[36]  S. Lewandowsky,et al.  Implicit Memory: Theoretical Issues , 1989 .

[37]  E. Tulving,et al.  Novelty assessment in the brain and long-term memory encoding , 1995, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[38]  E. Saltz,et al.  Response meaningfulness in paired associates: T-L frequency, m, and number of meanings (dm). , 1967, Journal of experimental psychology.

[39]  M. Humphreys,et al.  Toward a theory of human memory: Data structures and access processes , 1994, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[40]  M Glanzer,et al.  The mirror effect in recognition memory: data and theory. , 1990, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[41]  T. Landauer,et al.  Structural differences between common and rare words: Failure of equivalence assumptions for theories of word recognition , 1973 .

[42]  M. Humphreys,et al.  Different Ways to Cue a Coherent Memory System: A Theory for Episodic, Semantic, and Procedural Tasks. , 1989 .

[43]  Richard C. Atkinson,et al.  Search and decision processes in recognition memory. , 1974 .

[44]  R Ratcliff,et al.  Process dissociation, single-process theories, and recognition memory. , 1995, Journal of experimental psychology. General.

[45]  G. Hitch,et al.  Separate effects of word frequency and age of acquisition in recognition and recall. , 1998 .

[46]  B. Fischhoff,et al.  Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Learning and Memory , 1980 .

[47]  John R. Anderson,et al.  RECOGNITION AND RETRIEVAL PROCESSES IN FREE RECALL , 1972 .

[48]  Carol L. Curt,et al.  Errors in a recognition memory task are a U-shaped function of word frequency , 1978 .

[49]  Felicia A. Huppert,et al.  Recognition Memory in Amnesic Patients: Effect of Temporal Context and Familiarity of Material , 1976, Cortex.

[50]  Michael S. Humphreys,et al.  An auto-associative neural network for sparse representations : analysis and application to models of recognition and cued recall , 1994 .

[51]  M. Kinsbourne,et al.  Is the Word Frequency Effect on Recognition Threshold a Function of Transitional Probability? , 1970 .

[52]  David A. Caulton,et al.  Recognition Memory and Modality Judgments: A Comparison of Retrieval Dynamics , 1997 .

[53]  M. Glanzer,et al.  Forgetting and the mirror effect in recognition memory: concentering of underlying distributions , 1991 .

[54]  Ray Pike,et al.  Global matching: A comparison of the SAM, Minerva II, Matrix, and TODAM models. , 1989 .

[55]  J. G. Snodgrass,et al.  Pragmatics of measuring recognition memory: applications to dementia and amnesia. , 1988, Journal of experimental psychology. General.

[56]  Arthur I. Schulman,et al.  Word length and rarity in recognition memory , 1967 .

[57]  M. Humphreys,et al.  Recognition memory: A cue and information analysis , 1983, Memory & cognition.

[58]  S Dennis,et al.  A naturalistic study of the word frequency effect in episodic recognition , 1997, Memory & cognition.

[59]  R. Shiffrin,et al.  A retrieval model for both recognition and recall. , 1984, Psychological review.

[60]  John Price-Wilkin,et al.  Oxford English Dictionary (2nd ed.) , 1991 .

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

[62]  D. M. Green,et al.  Signal detection theory and psychophysics , 1966 .

[63]  C. Noble An analysis of meaning. , 1952, Psychological review.

[64]  Eugene B. Zechmeister,et al.  Orthographic Distinctiveness as a Variable in Word Recognition. , 1972 .

[65]  A. J. Flexser,et al.  Retrieval independence in recognition and recall. , 1978 .

[66]  H. Kucera,et al.  Computational analysis of present-day American English , 1967 .