Distinctive Processing Underlies Skilled Memory

Research on skilled memory has focused on organizational processes to the exclusion of item-specific processes, although theories of skilled memory do acknowledge the importance of both kinds of processes. Using the isolation methodology, we presented lists of American football team names to partici...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychological science 2005-05, Vol.16 (5), p.358-361
Hauptverfasser: Van Overschelde, James P., Rawson, Katherine A., Dunlosky, John, Hunt, R. Reed
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container_end_page 361
container_issue 5
container_start_page 358
container_title Psychological science
container_volume 16
creator Van Overschelde, James P.
Rawson, Katherine A.
Dunlosky, John
Hunt, R. Reed
description Research on skilled memory has focused on organizational processes to the exclusion of item-specific processes, although theories of skilled memory do acknowledge the importance of both kinds of processes. Using the isolation methodology, we presented lists of American football team names to participants who had either a high or a low level of knowledge about American football. An isolation effect (greater recall of the target in the isolate list than in a homogeneous control list) was observed only with high-knowledge participants. When standard lists were used, an isolation effect was observed with both groups. These findings empirically validate the importance of both organizational and item-specific processing as the basis of distinctive processing underlying skilled memory performance.
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subjects Character encoding
Cognition
Cognition & reasoning
Computer memory
Experiments
Football
Humans
Knowledge level
Memory
Memory recall
Mental Recall
Methodology
Professional sports
Psychology
Research fellowships
Research Reports
Running
Skills
U.S.A
Working memory
title Distinctive Processing Underlies Skilled Memory
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