Measuring Infant Memory
Existing memory measures L/ I, L/ B, L/( L + I) and L/( L + B) are defined in terms of baseline response rate, B, response rate immediately after acquisition, I, and response rate at a long-term retention test, L. These measures are compared to a new measure S= ( L − B)/( I − B). S, the fraction of...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Developmental review 1996, Vol.16 (3), p.284-300 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Existing memory measures
L/
I,
L/
B,
L/(
L + I) and
L/(
L + B) are defined in terms of baseline response rate,
B, response rate immediately after acquisition,
I, and response rate at a long-term retention test,
L. These measures are compared to a new measure
S= (
L − B)/(
I − B).
S, the fraction of acquired kicking rate remaining at the end of the retention interval, is preferred to the existing measures.
Sgraphically portrays the forgetting function. Point estimates and confidence intervals can be used to describe the proportion retained and to test hypotheses about the memory level. This is an improvement over the ordinal tests performed with the existing measures. ANOVAs can be performed on
Svalues to compare retention over days and between treatment groups.
Sestimates provide the basic data for fitting candidate forgetting laws to the obtained data.
Sappears to be a virtually unbiased estimator of the true proportion retained and has sensitivity comparable to that of the best of the existing measures. |
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ISSN: | 0273-2297 1090-2406 |
DOI: | 10.1006/drev.1996.0012 |