Hockley W E, Niewiadomski M W
Department of Psychology, Wilfrid Laurier University, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.
Mem Cognit. 2001 Dec;29(8):1176-84. doi: 10.3758/bf03206387.
The revelation effect is evidenced by an increase in positive recognition responses when the test probe is immediately preceded by an unrelated problem-solving task. As an alternative to familiarity-based explanations of this effect (Hicks & Marsh, 1998; Westerman & Greene, 1998), Niewiadomski and Hockley (2001) proposed a decision-based account in which it is assumed that the problem-solving task displaces the study list context in working memory, leading subjects to adopt a more liberal recognition criterion. In the present study, we show that the revelation effect is seen when the stimulus materials are pure lists of very rare words or nonwords. In contrast, for mixed lists of common words and very rare words or nonwords, the revelation effect is found for common words but disappears for very rare words and nonwords. We argue that, in mixed lists, the liberal decision bias following the revelation task and the criterion changes between common words and very rare words and nonwords serve to offset each other.
当测试探针之前紧接一个不相关的问题解决任务时,积极识别反应增加,这证明了启示效应。作为对这种效应基于熟悉度的解释(希克斯和马什,1998年;韦斯特曼和格林,1998年)的替代,涅维亚多姆斯基和霍克利(2001年)提出了一种基于决策的解释,其中假设问题解决任务在工作记忆中取代了学习列表的背景,导致受试者采用更宽松的识别标准。在本研究中,我们表明,当刺激材料是非常罕见的单词或非单词的纯列表时,会出现启示效应。相比之下,对于常见单词与非常罕见的单词或非单词的混合列表,常见单词会出现启示效应,但非常罕见的单词和非单词的启示效应则消失。我们认为,在混合列表中,启示任务后的宽松决策偏差以及常见单词与非常罕见的单词和非单词之间的标准变化相互抵消。