Direct comparison of auditory implicit memory tests

In this experiment, we examined the degree to which four implicit tests and two explicit tests, all involving auditory presentation, were sensitive to the perceptual characteristics of the stimuli presented during study. Presenting stimuli visually decreased priming in all the implicit memory tests,...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inPsychonomic bulletin & review Vol. 7; no. 2; pp. 347 - 353
Main Authors Pilotti, M, Bergman, E T, Gallo, D A, Sommers, M, Roediger, 3rd, H L
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.06.2000
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Summary:In this experiment, we examined the degree to which four implicit tests and two explicit tests, all involving auditory presentation, were sensitive to the perceptual characteristics of the stimuli presented during study. Presenting stimuli visually decreased priming in all the implicit memory tests, relative to auditory presentation. However, changing voice between study and test decreased priming only in the implicit memory tests requiring identification of words degraded by noise or by low-pass filtering, but not in those tests requiring generation from word portions (stems and fragments). Modality effects without voice effects were observed in cued recall, but the opposite pattern of results (voice effects without modality effects) was obtained in recognition. The primary new finding is the demonstration that auditory memory tests, both explicit and implicit, differ in their sensitivity to the perceptual information encoded during study.
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ISSN:1069-9384
1531-5320
DOI:10.3758/bf03212992