Watkins M J, LeCompte D C, Kim K
Department of Psychology, Rice University, Houston, Texas 77251-1892, USA.
J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn. 2000 Jan;26(1):239-45. doi: 10.1037//0278-7393.26.1.239.
Experiment 1 confirmed previous findings that common words are more recallable than are rare words when the 2 kinds of words are presented in separate lists but not when they are presented in the same list. Experiment 2 showed much the same pattern when an orienting task was performed during word presentation. In Experiment 3 common words were found to be more recallable than rare words even for mixed lists when no warning was given of the memory test, although the effect was less pronounced than for pure lists. In Experiment 4 stronger measures were taken to preclude anticipation of the memory test, and the effect of word commonness was found to be just as pronounced with mixed lists as it was with pure lists. It was suggested that lists are studied in a way believed to optimize recall and that mixed lists foster a strategy of favoring the rare words.
实验1证实了之前的研究结果:当两种单词分别列示时,常用词比生僻词更容易被回忆起来,但当它们列在同一列表中时则不然。实验2表明,在单词呈现过程中执行定向任务时,情况大致相同。在实验3中,即使没有给出记忆测试的提示,对于混合列表,常用词也比生僻词更容易被回忆起来,尽管这种效果不如纯列表那么明显。在实验4中,采取了更有力的措施来防止对记忆测试的预期,结果发现,对于混合列表,单词常见性的影响与纯列表一样显著。研究表明,人们以一种被认为能优化回忆的方式来学习列表,并且混合列表促使人们采取偏向生僻词的策略。