Retrieval Flashcards

1
Q

What techniques can be used to measure retrieval?

A

Free recall, cued recall, recognition and relearning.

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2
Q

According to Nelson (1978), which retrieval technique is the most sensitive?

A

Relearning (then recognition, then cued recall, then free recall).

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3
Q

What did Tulving and Psotka (1971) find regarding the difference between free and cued recall?

A

On lists of 24 words (6 categories, 4 in each), with a number of lists after the tested one (interference), free recall gradually decreased, while cued recall was slightly higher, then increased after 1 list, subsequently decreasing to about the level of the first free recall point.

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4
Q

What conclusion can be made from Tulving and Psotka (1971)?

A

Cued recall is less susceptible to interference.

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5
Q

What is the generate-recognise theory of free recall?

A

Anderson and Bower (1972) - mnemonic techniques like the pegword method or the method of loci work because they enable people to provide cues and consequently generate candidates for recognition.

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6
Q

What is the problem with the generate-recognise theory of free recall?

A

Research suggests that it doesn’t work - logically, it follows that recognition should be part of recall, but Tulving and Thomson (1973) demonstrated recognition failure - that not every item that can be recalled is recognised.

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7
Q

What method was used by Tulving and Thomson (1973)?

A

Given paired associates (cues are weak associates) to learn.
Then recognition condition - asked to produce 4 associates to cues which are strong associates, then asked if they recognise any of them.
Followed by recall condition - given half of associated pairs.

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8
Q

What did Tulving and Thomson (1973) find?

A
  • recall is better than recognition

- many words are recalled that were not recognised.

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9
Q

How are Tulving and Thomson (1973)’s findings explained?

A
  • cued recall task is very easy - weak associates
  • recognition task is very difficult - all the semantic associates seem very similar, and there’s the self-generation effect (Slameka and Graf, 1978)
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10
Q

What conclusions can be drawn from Tulving and Thomson (1973)?

A
  • Recall can produce better memory than recognition if it provides better retrieval cues.
  • Sometimes the item itself isn’t actually the best cue for identifying the context in which it was previously encountered.
  • The generate-recognise approach may often be used in free recall tasks, but it is not a complete model of all recall (e.g. cued recall).
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11
Q

What is the encoding specificity principle (Tulving, 1983)?

A

The idea that memory performance is best when the cues present at test match those that were encoded with the memory at study (Morris, Bransford and Franks, 1977).

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12
Q

What effect is explained by the encoding specificity principle?

A

Context dependent memory.

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13
Q

What did Gordon and Baddeley (1975) do?

A

Investigated context dependent memory - got divers to memorise a list of words either on land or underwater, then recall them also on land or underwater.

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14
Q

What did Gordon and Baddeley (1975) find?

A

A change of context impairs recall - this suggests that cues from the environment have been integrated into the encoding.

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15
Q

What did Gordon and Baddeley (1980) state?

A

That the same context dependent memory effect is not found in recognition.

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16
Q

What did Goodwin et al. (1960) do?

A

Investigated state dependent memory - the internal state of the subject (drunk or sober) with a 2x2 design similar to Gordon and Baddeley (1975).

17
Q

What did Goodwin et al. (1969) find?

A

That alcohol generally impairs memory, but there is a strong state dependency effect.

18
Q

Can state dependent memory be extended to other, less extreme, internal states?

A

Perhaps - mood dependent memory is very difficult to investigate, effect is weak. However mood congruent memory is much more robust.

19
Q

What is mood congruent memory?

A

The fact that we tend to recall information congruent with our current mood.

20
Q

How is mood congruent memory investigated?

A

Through using the Velten procedure - participants read either positive or negative statements before being asked to recall positive, negative or neutral words.

21
Q

What did Teasdale and Russell (1983) find?

A

Mood congruency effect - more positive words remembered when elated, more negative when depressed.

22
Q

What steps does the cognitive interview technique involve?

A
  1. Mentally reinstate event context (scene, thoughts, preceding events).
  2. Report EVERY detail.
  3. Report in different temporal orders.
  4. Describe from different viewpoints.
23
Q

What did Geiselman et al. (1986) do?

A

Had participants watch a violent films and then gave them a standard or cognitive interview 2 days later.

24
Q

What did Geiselman et al. (1986) find?

A

Standard interview yielded 29.4 correct items, cognitive 41.2, with no difference in number of errors.

25
Q

What support is there for the effectiveness of cognitive interviews?

A

Geiselman et al (1986), plus other recent support for many different contexts.

26
Q

Why are findings from cognitive psychology rarely used in court?

A
  1. There’s a perception that there are no agreed results.

2. People think that psychology is all common sense.

27
Q

What did Kassin, Ellsworth and Smith (1989) do?

A

A survey of 63 EWT experts, asking them about whether statements are true and common sense.

28
Q

What did Kassin, Ellsworth and Smith (1989) find?

A

For the statements about EWT being affected by question wording, other context wrong identification, and confidence as a predictor, truth rates were high and common sense rates low.

29
Q

What has research found about the relationship between confidence and accuracy?

A

Lab experiments rarely demonstrate a convincing relationship.

30
Q

What did Robinson and Johnson (1996) do?

A

Had participants watch a film of a crime then asked them to recall or recognise (4 answer forced choice) items from a film and rate their confidence.

31
Q

What did Robinson and Johnson (1996) find?

A

Confidence/accuracy correlations were 0.29 for recognition and 0.53 for recall - small but significant. Ease of retrieval may explain confidence.

32
Q

What problem is there with the fact that ease of retrieval may explain confidence?

A

It creates a problem with repeated recalls - conflation.

33
Q

How may real life confidence-accuracy correlations compare to those found in lab experiments?

A

Much higher - Gruneberg & Sykes (1993).