Campoy Guillermo
Universidad de Murcia, Campus de Espinardo, Facultad de Psicología, 30100 Murcia, Spain.
Acta Psychol (Amst). 2011 Sep;138(1):135-42. doi: 10.1016/j.actpsy.2011.05.016. Epub 2011 Jun 23.
Two experiments investigated the possibility that the word-length effect in short-term memory (STM) is a consequence of long words generating a greater level of retroactive interference than shorter words. In Experiment 1, six-word lists were auditorily presented under articulatory suppression for immediate serial reconstruction of only the first three words. These three words were always drawn from a single set of middle-length words, whereas the last three positions were occupied by either short or long interfering words. The results showed worse memory performance when the to-be-remembered words were followed by long words. In Experiment 2, a recent-probes task was used, in which recent negative probes matched a target word in trial n-2. The results showed lower levels of proactive interference when trial n-1 involved long words instead of short words, suggesting that long words displaced previous STM content to a greater extent. By two different experimental approaches, therefore, this study shows that long words produce more retroactive interference than short words, supporting an interference-based account for the word-length effect.
两项实验探究了短期记忆(STM)中的词长效应可能是长词比短词产生更大程度的后向干扰的结果这一可能性。在实验1中,六个单词的列表在发音抑制条件下通过听觉呈现,以便仅对前三个单词进行即时系列回忆。这三个单词总是从一组单一的中等长度单词中选取,而最后三个位置由短或长的干扰词占据。结果表明,当要记忆的单词后面跟着长词时,记忆表现更差。在实验2中,使用了近期探测任务,其中近期的否定探测与第n - 2次试验中的目标词匹配。结果表明,当第n - 1次试验涉及长词而非短词时,前向干扰水平较低,这表明长词在更大程度上取代了先前的STM内容。因此,通过两种不同的实验方法,本研究表明长词比短词产生更多的后向干扰,支持了基于干扰的词长效应解释。