Individual and Combined Effects of Enactment and Testing on Memory for Action Phrases
We investigated the individual and combined effects of enactment and testing on memory for action phrases to address whether both study techniques commonly promote item-specific processing. Participants (N = 112) were divided into four groups (n = 28). They either exclusively studied 36 action phras...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Experimental psychology 2014-01, Vol.61 (5), p.347-355 |
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Zusammenfassung: | We investigated the individual and combined effects of enactment and testing on
memory for action phrases to address whether both study techniques commonly
promote item-specific processing. Participants (N = 112) were
divided into four groups (n = 28). They either exclusively
studied 36 action phrases (e.g., "lift the glass") or both studied
and cued-recalled them in four trials. During study trials participants encoded
the action phrases either by motorically performing them, or by reading them
aloud, and they took final verb-cued recall tests over 18-min and 1-week
retention intervals. A testing effect was demonstrated for action phrases,
however, only when they were verbally encoded, and not when they were enacted.
Similarly, enactive (relative to verbal) encoding reduced the rate of
forgetting, but only when the action phrases were exclusively studied, and not
when they were also tested. These less-than-additive effects of enactment and
testing on the rate of forgetting, as well as on long-term retention, support
the notion that both study techniques effectively promote item-specific
processing that can only be marginally increased further by combining them. |
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ISSN: | 1618-3169 2190-5142 2190-5142 |
DOI: | 10.1027/1618-3169/a000254 |