The effects of subject-generated and experimenter-provided memory tags on free recall.

Citation

Grimmett, S. A., & Johnson, S. R. (1977). The effects of subject-generated and experimenter-provided memory tags on free recall. Developmental Psychology, 13(3), 230-235.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/0012-1649.13.3.230

Abstract

64 children from Grades 2 and 5 participated in a recall task. There were 4 instructional conditions distinguished by the type of retrieval cue: sign, subcategory, supracategory, and control. The task required that the Ss image and recall items from 6 successively presented sets of categorized pictorial stimuli. These categories, however, were not mentioned; instead, a sign representing an activity for each set was emphasized as the retrieval cue. Significant effects of grade and of condition, favoring the subcategory condition, were determined by ANOVA. The results, based upon total recall as well as items-per-category and category recall, are discussed in relation to E. Tulving and M. J. Watkins's (see record 1975-26816-001) encoding specificity principle, A. Paivio's (1971) 2-process theory of memory, and F. I. Craik and R. S. Lockhart's (see record 1973-20189-001) levels-of-processing approach to memory. (19 ref) (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)