Nimmo Lisa M, Roodenrys Steven
University of Wollongong, Australia.
Q J Exp Psychol (Hove). 2006 Mar;59(3):577-96. doi: 10.1080/02724980443000845.
The current research examined the predictions that short-term memory models generate for the phonological similarity effect, when similarity was defined in different ways. Three serial recall experiments with consonant-vowel-consonant (CVC) nonwords are reported, where the position of the phonemes that list items shared was manipulated (i.e., shared vowel and final consonant [VC; Experiment 1], initial consonant and vowel [CV; Experiment 2], or the two consonants [C_C; Experiment 3]. The results show that the position of common phonemes in nonwords has differential effects on order and item information. The findings are discussed in relation to previous research into the effect of phonemic similarity on nonword recall, and modifications to current short-term memory models are proposed.
当前的研究考察了在相似性以不同方式定义时,短期记忆模型对语音相似性效应所产生的预测。报告了三个使用辅音-元音-辅音(CVC)非词的系列回忆实验,其中列出项目所共有的音素位置被加以操控(即,共享元音和最后一个辅音[VC;实验1]、开头辅音和元音[CV;实验2],或两个辅音[C_C;实验3])。结果表明,非词中共同音素的位置对顺序和项目信息有不同影响。结合先前关于音素相似性对非词回忆影响的研究对这些发现进行了讨论,并对当前的短期记忆模型提出了修正建议。