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Farrell, Simon – Psychological Review, 2012
A model of short-term memory and episodic memory is presented, with the core assumptions that (a) people parse their continuous experience into episodic clusters and (b) items are clustered together in memory as episodes by binding information within an episode to a common temporal context. Along with the additional assumption that information…
Descriptors: Short Term Memory, Recall (Psychology), Long Term Memory, Memorization
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Kumaran, Dharshan; McClelland, James L. – Psychological Review, 2012
In this article, we present a perspective on the role of the hippocampal system in generalization, instantiated in a computational model called REMERGE (recurrency and episodic memory results in generalization). We expose a fundamental, but neglected, tension between prevailing computational theories that emphasize the function of the hippocampus…
Descriptors: Generalization, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Role, Memory
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Turner, Brandon M.; Van Zandt, Trisha; Brown, Scott – Psychological Review, 2011
Signal detection theory forms the core of many current models of cognition, including memory, choice, and categorization. However, the classic signal detection model presumes the a priori existence of fixed stimulus representations--usually Gaussian distributions--even when the observer has no experience with the task. Furthermore, the classic…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Infants, Recognition (Psychology), Stimuli
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Polyn, Sean M.; Norman, Kenneth A.; Kahana, Michael J. – Psychological Review, 2009
The authors present the context maintenance and retrieval (CMR) model of memory search, a generalized version of the temporal context model of M. W. Howard and M. J. Kahana (2002a), which proposes that memory search is driven by an internally maintained context representation composed of stimulus-related and source-related features. In the CMR…
Descriptors: Maintenance, Semantics, Recall (Psychology), Models
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Ratcliff, Roger; Starns, Jeffrey J. – Psychological Review, 2009
A new model for confidence judgments in recognition memory is presented. In the model, the match between a single test item and memory produces a distribution of evidence, with better matches corresponding to distributions with higher means. On this match dimension, confidence criteria are placed, and the areas between the criteria under the…
Descriptors: Recognition (Psychology), Models, Test Items, Reaction Time
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Benjamin, Aaron S. – Psychological Review, 2010
It is widely assumed that older adults suffer a deficit in the psychological processes that underlie remembering of contextual or source information. This conclusion is based in large part on empirical interactions, including disordinal ones, that reveal differential effects of manipulations of memory strength on recognition in young and old…
Descriptors: Memory, Age Differences, Context Effect, Aging (Individuals)
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Brown, Gordon D. A.; Neath, Ian; Chater, Nick – Psychological Review, 2007
A model of memory retrieval is described. The model embodies four main claims: (a) temporal memory--traces of items are represented in memory partly in terms of their temporal distance from the present; (b) scale-similarity--similar mechanisms govern retrieval from memory over many different timescales; (c) local distinctiveness--performance on a…
Descriptors: Memorization, Memory, Brain, Behavioral Science Research
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Sederberg, Per B.; Howard, Marc W.; Kahana, Michael J. – Psychological Review, 2008
The authors present a new model of free recall on the basis of M. W. Howard and M. J. Kahana's temporal context model and M. Usher and J. L. McClelland's leaky-accumulator decision model. In this model, contextual drift gives rise to both short-term and long-term recency effects, and contextual retrieval gives rise to short-term and long-term…
Descriptors: Models, Memory, Decision Making, Recall (Psychology)
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Howard, Marc W.; Kahana, Michael J.; Sederberg, Per B. – Psychological Review, 2008
Space does not allow us to make detailed rebuttals to Davelaar, Usher, Haarmann, and Goshen-Gottstein's criticisms of the temporal context model's (TCM-A's) ability to account for dissociations between immediate and delayed recall nor to explain how TCM could account for list discrimination experiments. We agree that future work is needed to reach…
Descriptors: Models, Recall (Psychology), Context Effect, Short Term Memory
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Wixted, John T. – Psychological Review, 2004
T. Ribot's (1881) law of retrograde amnesia states that brain damage impairs recently formed memories to a greater extent than older memories, which is generally taken to imply that memories need time to consolidate. A. Jost's (1897) law of forgetting states that if 2 memories are of the same strength but different ages, the older will decay more…
Descriptors: Memory, Neurological Impairments
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Kimball, Daniel R.; Smith, Troy A.; Kahana, Michael J. – Psychological Review, 2007
The authors report a new theory of false memory building upon existing associative memory models and implemented in fSAM, the first fully specified quantitative model of false recall. Participants frequently intrude unstudied critical words while recalling lists comprising their strongest semantic associates but infrequently produce other…
Descriptors: Semantics, Memory, Recall (Psychology), Association (Psychology)
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Chechile, Richard A. – Psychological Review, 2006
A framework is developed to rigorously test an entire class of memory retention functions by examining hazard properties. Evidence is provided that the memory hazard function is not monotonically decreasing. Yet most of the proposals for retention functions, which have emerged from the psychological literature, imply that memory hazard is…
Descriptors: Intervals, Memory, Retention (Psychology), Models
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Dunn, John C. – Psychological Review, 2004
This article critically examines the view that the signal detection theory (SDT) interpretation of the remember-know (RK) paradigm has been ruled out by the evidence. The author evaluates 5 empirical arguments against a database of 72 studies reporting RK data under 400 different conditions. These arguments concern (a) the functional independence…
Descriptors: Memory, Databases, Theories, Knowledge Level
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Schmader, Toni; Johns, Michael; Forbes, Chad – Psychological Review, 2008
Research showing that activation of negative stereotypes can impair the performance of stigmatized individuals on a wide variety of tasks has proliferated. However, a complete understanding of the processes underlying these stereotype threat effects on behavior is still lacking. The authors examine stereotype threat in the context of research on…
Descriptors: Stereotypes, Negative Attitudes, Short Term Memory, Stress Variables
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Ans, Bernard; Carbonnel, Serge; Valdois, Sylviane – Psychological Review, 1998
A connectionist feedforward network implementing a mapping from orthography to phonology is described. This model develops a view of the reading system that accounts for irregular word and pseudoword reading without relying on any system of implicit or explicit conversion rules. The model accounts for skilled reading performance and the patterns…
Descriptors: Dyslexia, Memory, Models, Networks
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