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Alternatives in Testing Recognition Memory
Nature, 1962RECOGNITION is often possible where recall is not. The inference that memory is superior when tested by the former procedure has been challenged by Davis et al.1, who showed that the number of alternatives from which the items seen previously must be selected was a crucial factor governing performance.
H C, DALE, A D, BADDELEY
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CONTINUOUS FEEDBACK IN RECOGNITION MEMORY
Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1973Signal-detection models of recognition memory assume that S's decision as to whether or not he recognizes a stimulus is a function of a criterion value. In selecting his criterion, S takes into consideration the a priori probability of an old item and the costs and rewards of a hit or false alarm.
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Infants' recognition memory for faces
Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1972Abstract Infants' recognition memory, defined by novelty preferences, was found to be reliably greater when one properly oriented representation of a face was to be distinguished from another than when the same faces rotated 180° were to be differentiated. Discriminations among upright faces occurred at 5 to 6 months, were more easily accomplished by
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Recognition Memory, Orcadian Rhythms, and Sleep
Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1997One set of 20 subjects learned a list of words early in the morning while another set of 20 learned the same material in the midafternoon. Half of the subjects ( n=10) were tested after an intervening four hours of sleep, while the other 10 were tested after four hours of waking activity.
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