College of New Jersey, Ewing, New Jersey, USA.
Mem Cognit. 2010 Apr;38(3):279-91. doi: 10.3758/MC.38.3.279.
Working memory was designed to explain four benchmark memory effects: the word length effect, the irrelevant speech effect, the acoustic confusion effect, and the concurrent articulation effect. However, almost all research thus far has used tests that emphasize forward recall. In four experiments, we examine whether each effect is observable when the items are recalled in reverse order. Subjects did not know which recall direction would be required until the time of test, ensuring that encoding processes would be identical for both recall directions. Contrary to predictions of both the primacy model and the feature model, the benchmark memory effect was either absent or greatly attenuated with backward recall, despite being present with forward recall. Direction of recall had no effect on the more difficult conditions (e.g., long words, similar-sounding items, items presented with irrelevant speech, and items studied with concurrent articulation). Several factors not considered by the primacy and feature models are noted, and a possible explanation within the framework of the SIMPLE model is briefly presented.
词长效应、无关言语效应、语音混淆效应和同时发音效应。然而,迄今为止,几乎所有的研究都使用强调正向回忆的测试。在四个实验中,我们研究了当项目以反向顺序回忆时,每个效应是否可以观察到。直到测试时,受试者才知道需要哪种回忆方向,这确保了两种回忆方向的编码过程是相同的。与优先模型和特征模型的预测相反,尽管正向回忆时存在基准记忆效应,但反向回忆时该效应要么不存在,要么大大减弱。回忆方向对更困难的条件(例如,长单词、发音相似的项目、伴随无关言语呈现的项目以及用同时发音学习的项目)没有影响。注意到了优先模型和特征模型没有考虑的几个因素,并简要介绍了在 SIMPLE 模型框架内的一种可能解释。