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  1. One hundred years of forgetting: A quantitative description of retention.David C. Rubin &Amy E. Wenzel -1996 -Psychological Review 103 (4):734-760.
  • The Demise of Short-Term Memory Revisited: Empirical and Computational Investigations of Recency Effects.Eddy J. Davelaar,Yonatan Goshen-Gottstein,Amir Ashkenazi,Henk J. Haarmann &Marius Usher -2005 -Psychological Review 112 (1):3-42.
  • Absolute Identification by Relative Judgment.Neil Stewart,Gordon D. A. Brown &Nick Chater -2005 -Psychological Review 112 (4):881-911.
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  • Incremental planning in sequence production.Caroline Palmer &Peter Q. Pfordresher -2003 -Psychological Review 110 (4):683-712.
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  • A serial position effect in recall of United States presidents.Henry L. Roediger &Robert G. Crowder -1976 -Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 8 (4):275-278.
  • "Pulling teeth and torture" : Musical memory and problem solving.Roger Chaffin Gabriela Imreh -1997 -Thinking and Reasoning 3 (4):315 – 336.
    A concert pianist the second author videotaped herself learning J.S. Bach's Italian Concerto Presto , and commented on the problems she encountered as she practised. Approximately two years later the pianist wrote out the first page of the score from memory. The pianist's verbal reports indicated that in the early sessions she identified and memorised the formal structure of the piece, and in the later sessions she practised using this organisation to retrieve the memory cues that controlled her playing. The (...) practice and recall data supported this account. Both were organised by the formal structure of the music. Practice segments were more likely to start and stop at boundaries of the formal structure than at other locations, and recall was higher for the beginnings of sections than for later portions. Like other forms of expert memory, pianistic memory appears to be based on use of a highly practised retrieval scheme which permits rapid retrieval of information from long-term memory. (shrink)
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  • Are Rank Orders Mentally Represented by Spatial Arrays?Ulrich von Hecker &Karl Christoph Klauer -2021 -Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    The present contribution argues that transitive reasoning, as exemplified in paradigms of linear order construction in mental space, is associated with spatial effects. Starting from robust findings from the early 70s, research so far has widely discussed the symbolic distance effect. This effect shows that after studying pairs of relations, e.g., “A > B,” “B > C,” and “D > E,” participants are more correct, and faster in correct responding, the wider the “distance” between two elements within the chain A (...) > B > C > D > E. The SDE has often been given spatial interpretations, but alternatively, non-spatial models of the effect are also viable on the empirical basis so far, which means the question about spatial contributions to the construction of analog representations of rank orders is still open. We suggest here that laterality effects can add the necessary additional information to support the idea of spatial processes. We introduce anchoring effects in terms of showing response advantages for congruent versus incongruent pairings of presentation location on a screen on the one hand, and the hypothetical spatial arrangement of the order in mental space, on the other hand. We report pertinent findings and discuss anchoring paradigms with respect to their internal validity as well as their being rooted in basic mechanisms of trained reading/writing direction. (shrink)
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  • Does Presentation Order Impact Choice After Delay?Jonah Berger -2016 -Topics in Cognitive Science 8 (3):670-684.
    Options are often presented incidentally in a sequence, but does serial position impact choice after delay, and if so, how? We address this question in a consequential real-world choice domain. Using 25 years of citation data, and a unique identification strategy, we examine the relationship between article order and citation count. Results indicate that mere serial position affects the prominence that research achieves: Earlier-listed articles receive more citations. Furthermore, our identification strategy allows us to cast doubt on alternative explanations and (...) instead indicate that the effect is driven by psychological processes of attention and memory. These findings deepen the understanding of how presentation order impacts choice, suggest that subtle presentation factors can bias an important scientific metric, and shed light on how psychological processes shape collective outcomes. (shrink)
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  • Intention, attention and long-term memory for visual scenes: It all depends on the scenes.Karla K. Evans &Alan Baddeley -2018 -Cognition 180 (C):24-37.
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  • The production effect in memory: multiple species of distinctiveness.Michal Icht,Yaniv Mama &Daniel Algom -2014 -Frontiers in Psychology 5.
  • I know why you voted for Trump: (Over)inferring motives based on choice.Kate Barasz,Tami Kim &Ioannis Evangelidis -2019 -Cognition 188 (C):85-97.
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  • Effects of incidental and intentional learning instructions on the free recall of naturalistic sounds.Roberta A. Ferrara,C. Richard Puff,Gerard A. Gioia &J. Melinda Richards -1978 -Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 11 (6):353-355.
  • Combining two separate series into a single ordering: Testing the local and global distinctiveness theories with absolute and relative judgments.Jerwen Jou -2019 -Consciousness and Cognition 72 (C):19-30.
  • The reminiscence bump without memories: The distribution of imagined word-cued and important autobiographical memories in a hypothetical 70-year-old.Jonathan Koppel &Dorthe Berntsen -2016 -Consciousness and Cognition 44:89-102.
  • Scale invariance of temporal order discrimination using complex, naturalistic events.Sze Chai Kwok &Emiliano Macaluso -2015 -Cognition 140:111-121.
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  • Adaptation-level theory and the free recall of mixed-frequency lists.David C. Rubin &Stephen Corbett -1982 -Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 20 (1):27-29.
  • A test of Murdock’s D scale technique using an unusual stimulus set.Robert Saxe -1974 -Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 4 (6):585-587.
  • The Isolation, Primacy, and Recency Effects Predicted by an Adaptive LTD/LTP Threshold in Postsynaptic Cells.Sverker Sikström -2006 -Cognitive Science 30 (2):243-275.
    An item that stands out (is isolated) from its context is better remembered than an item consistent with the context. This isolation effect cannot be accounted for by increased attention, because it occurs when the isolated item is presented as the first item, or by impoverished memory of nonisolated items, because the isolated item is better remembered than a control list consisting of equally different items. The isolation effect is seldom experimentally or theoretically related to the primacy or the recency (...) effects—that is, the improved performance on the first few and last items, respectively, on the serial position curve. The primacy effect cannot easily be accounted for by rehearsal in short‐term memory because it occurs when rehearsal is eliminated. This article suggests that the primacy, the recency, and the isolation effects can be accounted for by experience‐dependent synaptic plasticity in neural cells. Neurological empirical data suggest that the threshold that determines whether cells will show long‐term potentiation (LTP) or long‐term depression (LTD) varies as a function of recent postsynaptic activity and that synaptic plasticity is bounded. By implementing an adaptive LTP‐LTD threshold in an artificial neural network, the various aspects of the isolation, the primacy, and the recency effects are accounted for, whereas none of these phenomena are accounted for if the threshold is constant. This theory suggests a possible link between the cognitive and the neurological levels. (shrink)
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  • Storage and retrieval processes in the serial position effect.Barry Skoff &Richard A. Chechile -1977 -Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 9 (4):265-268.

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