Department of Psychology, University of Waterloo, 200 University Avenue West, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada N2L 3G1.
J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn. 2010 Nov;36(6):1543-7. doi: 10.1037/a0020604.
The production effect is the substantial benefit to memory of having studied information aloud as opposed to silently. MacLeod, Gopie, Hourihan, Neary, and Ozubko (2010) have explained this enhancement by suggesting that a word studied aloud acquires a distinctive encoding record and that recollecting this record supports identifying a word studied aloud as "old." This account was tested using a list discrimination paradigm, where the task is to identify in which of 2 studied lists a target word was presented. The critical list was a mixed list containing words studied aloud and words studied silently. Under the distinctiveness explanation, studying an additional list all aloud should disrupt the production effect in the critical list because remembering having said a word aloud in the critical list will no longer be diagnostic of list status. In contrast, studying an additional list all silently should leave the production effect in the critical list intact. These predictions were confirmed in 2 experiments.
出声学习效应是指与默读相比,出声学习信息对记忆有实质性的益处。MacLeod、Gopie、Hourihan、Neary 和 Ozubko(2010)通过提出以下观点解释了这种增强现象:出声学习的单词获得了独特的编码记录,回忆该记录有助于将出声学习的单词识别为“旧词”。该解释通过使用列表辨别范式进行了测试,在该范式中,任务是识别目标词在 2 个学习列表中的哪一个中呈现。关键列表是一个混合列表,其中包含出声学习的单词和默读学习的单词。根据独特性解释,在关键列表中全部以出声的方式学习额外的列表应该会破坏关键列表中的出声学习效应,因为在关键列表中回忆出声说过一个单词不再是列表状态的诊断依据。相比之下,在关键列表中以全部默读的方式学习额外的列表应该会使出声学习效应保持完整。这两个实验证实了这些预测。