Short-Term Forgetting of Order Under Conditions of Reduced Interference
Author:
James S. Nairne
DOI:
10.1080/713755806
Publication Frequency:
8 issues per year
Published in:
The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A,
Volume
52,
Issue
1
February
1999
, pages 241
- 251
Number of References: 27
Formats available:
PDF
(English)
Now published as: The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology
The circumstances under which this title is published have changed:
Reason for change: merged
Date of change: 2006
New ISSN: 1747-0218
New EISSN: 1747-1226
View Article:
View Article (PDF)
Abstract
Three experiments examined the short-term retention of order in a modified Brown-Peterson task. Our intent was to examine the loss of order memory, unconfounded by item memory, under conditions in which interference from prior trials is kept low. In previous work on the short-term forgetting of order, experimenters have tended to repeat the same items across trials or to draw from a restricted set; in our experiments, we changed the to-be-recalled items from trial to trial and used reconstruction as the retention measure. In all three experiments, very little forgetting was obtained across retention intervals that have traditionally produced dramatic and systematic loss. Our results are reminiscent of those obtained in the BrownPeterson task when performance is assessed after only the first experimental trial.
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