Van Hooff Johanna C, Whitaker T Aisling, Ford Ruth M
Department of Psychology, University of Kent, Keynes College, Canterbury, Kent, UK.
Brain Cogn. 2009 Nov;71(2):153-64. doi: 10.1016/j.bandc.2009.05.001. Epub 2009 Jun 24.
We investigated whether directed forgetting as elicited by the item-cueing method results solely from differential rehearsal of to-be-remembered vs. to-be-forgotten words or, additionally, from inhibitory processes that actively impair retrieval of to-be-forgotten words. During study, participants (N=24) were instructed to remember half of a series of presented words (TBR) and to forget the other half (TBF), as indicated by an instruction cue shown shortly after each word. During test, accuracy and reaction time measures from lexical decisions (indirect memory test) followed by recognition-memory judgements (direct memory test) were supplemented with event-related potential (ERP) recordings. Results from the behavioural measures revealed directed forgetting in the recognition-memory test but not the lexical-decision test. ERPs obtained during recognition indicated that TBR words elicited a larger parietal old/new effect than TBF words overall, suggesting that remember/forget instructions impaired conscious recollection processes more severely than familiarity processes. Moreover, TBF words that were successfully forgotten elicited less parietal activity than correctly rejected new words (the reversed old/new effect; Nowicka, A., Jednorórog, K., Wypych, M., & Marchewka, A. (2009). Reversed old/new effect for intentionally forgotten words: An ERP study of directed forgetting. International Journal of Psychophysiology, 71, 97-102). This was taken to implicate that inhibitory processes likely affected these items. Enhanced negativities for successfully forgotten TBF words relative to new words were observed in the lexical-decision task at early (150-250 ms) and late (800-1000 ms) time windows, suggesting that inhibitory influences disrupt more than just conscious recollection when memory retrieval is tested indirectly.
我们研究了由项目提示法引发的定向遗忘是否仅源于对要记住的单词与要遗忘的单词进行了不同的复述,或者此外还源于主动损害要遗忘单词提取的抑制过程。在学习过程中,参与者(N = 24)被指示记住一系列呈现单词中的一半(TBR),并遗忘另一半(TBF),每个单词之后不久显示的指示提示会表明这一点。在测试过程中,词汇判断(间接记忆测试)后的准确性和反应时间测量,随后是识别记忆判断(直接记忆测试),并辅以事件相关电位(ERP)记录。行为测量结果显示在识别记忆测试中存在定向遗忘,但在词汇判断测试中没有。识别过程中获得的ERP表明,总体而言,TBR单词比TBF单词引发了更大的顶叶新旧效应,这表明记住/遗忘指令对有意识回忆过程的损害比对熟悉过程的损害更严重。此外,成功遗忘的TBF单词比正确拒绝的新单词引发的顶叶活动更少(反向新旧效应;Nowicka, A., Jednorórog, K., Wypych, M., & Marchewka, A. (2009). 故意遗忘单词的反向新旧效应:定向遗忘的ERP研究。《国际心理生理学杂志》,71, 97 - 102)。这被认为意味着抑制过程可能影响了这些项目。在词汇判断任务的早期(150 - 250毫秒)和晚期(800 - 1000毫秒)时间窗口中,观察到成功遗忘的TBF单词相对于新单词的负波增强,这表明当间接测试记忆提取时,抑制性影响不仅仅破坏有意识回忆。