Retrieval operations in cued recall and recognition Article

Fisher, RP. (1979). Retrieval operations in cued recall and recognition . MEMORY & COGNITION, 7(3), 224-231. 10.3758/BF03197542

cited authors

  • Fisher, RP

authors

abstract

  • The present study compared the effects of two classes of experimental manipulations on the recognition and cued recall of target words learned in the presence of list cues. One class of manipulations, learning instructions (repetition vs. meaningful rehearsal), had similar effects on recall and recognition, whereas the other, preexperimental association between target and cue words, had separable effects: Cue-to-target association affected only recall, while target-to-cue association affected only recognition performance. Recall and recognition were thus viewed as fundamentally similar processes, both of which require retrieval operations. Differences between the two were attributed to the differential abilities of the recall and recognition retrieval cues to access the original episodic event. © 1979 Psychonomic Society, Inc.

publication date

  • May 1, 1979

published in

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

start page

  • 224

end page

  • 231

volume

  • 7

issue

  • 3