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Gepubliceerd in:

01-11-2003 | Original Article

The item-order hypothesis reconsidered: The role of order information in free recall

Auteurs: Johannes Engelkamp, Petra Jahn, Kerstin H. Seiler

Gepubliceerd in: Psychological Research | Uitgave 4/2003

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Abstract.

According to the item-order approach of free recall, in pure short lists the free recall of unrelated items is organized according to their order of presentation in the study list. The approach was applied in the present study to experimenter-performed tasks (EPTs) and subject-performed tasks (SPTs). It claims that EPTs provide better serial order information than SPTs. Consequently, free recall of EPTs should be more organized along the presentation order of the items than the free recall of SPTs. In three experiments, some specific aspects of this approach were studied. Firstly, it was demonstrated that serial retrieval is not strongly used spontaneously and that its use is overestimated in the literature because it is usually evoked by an order reconstruction test which follows free recall testing. Secondly, a serial retrieval strategy in free recall can be encouraged by explicit instructions. Finally, the present experiments showed that a serial output strategy alone does not allow one to predict performance in free recall. The implications of these findings for the item-order approach will be discussed.
Voetnoten
1
A number of different measures have been proposed which can indicate the extent to which the inspection of the output order by pairs matches with the input order, e.g. Pair Frequency Score (PF, Anderson & Watts, 1969) and Intertrial Repetition Measure (ITR, Bousfield & Bousfield, 1966). Since PF and ITR have been considered by many to be two fundamental output adjacency measures (Sternberg & Tulving, 1977), these scores as well as the uni- and bidirectional version of the ARC' scores were calculated for the present data. Even if it is possible to analyze higher order units with the ARC' scores, we only considered item pairs. All scores showed similar effects in all experiments. ARC', which can be viewed as an advancement of ITR, has the advantage in that it states a fixed chance level which is 0 and a maximum of perfect organization which is 1.0. Therefore, in the present paper we decided to present only unidirectional ARC' scores.
 
2
The positional recall findings are unchanged if the performance is computed as the proportion of recalled items. In this case, the score is .63 for EPTs and .50 for SPTs (t(38) = -2.22, p <.05). This finding shows that it does not depend on recall level.
 
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Metagegevens
Titel
The item-order hypothesis reconsidered: The role of order information in free recall
Auteurs
Johannes Engelkamp
Petra Jahn
Kerstin H. Seiler
Publicatiedatum
01-11-2003
Uitgeverij
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Gepubliceerd in
Psychological Research / Uitgave 4/2003
Print ISSN: 0340-0727
Elektronisch ISSN: 1430-2772
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00426-002-0118-1