The Source of Feelings of Familiarity: The Discrepancy-Attribution Hypothesis
Many investigators have observed that the feeling of familiarity is associated with fluency of processing. The authors demonstrated a case in which the feeling of familiarity did not result from fluency per se; they argued that it resulted instead from perceiving a discrepancy between the actual and...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition memory, and cognition, 2000-05, Vol.26 (3), p.547-565 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Many investigators have observed that the feeling of
familiarity is associated with fluency of processing. The authors
demonstrated a case in which the feeling of familiarity did not
result from fluency per se; they argued that it resulted instead
from perceiving a discrepancy between the actual and expected
fluency of processing (
B. W. A. Whittlesea & L. D. Williams, 1998
).
In this article, the authors extend that argument. They observed
that stimuli that are experienced as strongly familiar when
presented in isolation are instead experienced as being novel when
presented in a rhyme or semantic context. They interpreted that
result to mean that in those other contexts, the subjects brought a
different standard to bear in evaluating the fluency of their
processing. This different standard caused the subjects to perceive
their performance not as discrepant, but as coherent in one case and
incongruous in the other. The authors suggest that the perception of
discrepancy is a major factor in producing the feeling of
familiarity. They further suggest that the occurrence of that
perception depends on the task in which the person is engaged when
encountering the stimulus, because that task affects the standard
that the person will apply in evaluating their processing. |
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ISSN: | 0278-7393 1939-1285 |
DOI: | 10.1037/0278-7393.26.3.547 |