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Hanczakowski, Maciej; Beaman, C. Philip; Jones, Dylan M. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2016
Negative priming in free recall is the finding of impaired memory performance when previously ignored auditory distracters become targets of encoding and retrieval. This negative priming has been attributed to an aftereffect of deploying inhibitory mechanisms that serve to suppress auditory distraction and minimize interference with learning and…
Descriptors: Priming, Inhibition, Auditory Perception, Interference (Learning)
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Macken, Bill; Taylor, John C.; Jones, Dylan M. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2014
The advantage for real words over nonwords in serial recall--the "lexicality effect"--is typically attributed to support for item-level phonology, either via redintegration, whereby partially degraded short-term traces are "cleaned up" via support from long-term representations of the phonological material or via the more…
Descriptors: Perceptual Motor Learning, Short Term Memory, Semantics, Recall (Psychology)
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Marsh, John E.; Hughes, Robert W.; Jones, Dylan M. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2008
Five experiments demonstrate auditory-semantic distraction in tests of memory for semantic category-exemplars. The effects of irrelevant sound on category-exemplar recall are shown to be functionally distinct from those found in the context of serial short-term memory by showing sensitivity to: The lexical-semantic, rather than acoustic,…
Descriptors: Semantics, Short Term Memory, Semiotics, Auditory Perception