Toppino T C, Kasserman J E, Mracek W A
Department of Psychology, Villanova University, PA 19085.
J Exp Child Psychol. 1991 Feb;51(1):123-38. doi: 10.1016/0022-0965(91)90079-8.
In Experiment 1, preschoolers, first graders, and third graders were presented a list of pictures that included twice-presented items separated by varying numbers of intervening items. Performance on a subsequent recognition test improved as the spacing between repetitions increased, but the effect of spacing did not interact reliably with grade level. In Experiment 2a, we replicated the spaced-repetition effect in young children and found a similar effect in college students. In Experiment 2b, we varied the conditions under which lists were presented to college students and again found a spacing function that was comparable to that of very young children. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that spaced-repetition effects in recognition are produced by fundamental memory mechanisms that are operational at a very early age and which undergo little change with development.
在实验1中,向学龄前儿童、一年级学生和三年级学生展示了一系列图片,其中包括一些被不同数量的间隔项目隔开的重复出现两次的项目。在随后的识别测试中,随着重复之间间隔的增加,表现有所提高,但间隔的影响与年级水平之间没有可靠的交互作用。在实验2a中,我们在幼儿中复制了间隔重复效应,并在大学生中发现了类似的效应。在实验2b中,我们改变了向大学生呈现列表的条件,再次发现了一个与非常年幼的儿童相当的间隔函数。这些结果与以下假设一致:识别中的间隔重复效应是由基本记忆机制产生的,这些机制在非常年幼时就开始起作用,并且随着发展变化很小。