Bryant D J
Department of Psychology, Stanford University, CA 94305.
Mem Cognit. 1990 Jul;18(4):348-58. doi: 10.3758/bf03197124.
In list-learning experiments, the orienting question asked of one item may influence the processing of, and memory for, later items in the list. Four experiments demonstrated that words that are not related to their own orienting question, but that are semantically related to the question asked of a previous item, are better recalled than are words that are not related to any question in the list. Factors that influence this memory enhancement include the number of times relevant orienting questions appear during study, as well as the retention interval. Experiment 4 revealed that this effect is contingent upon conscious awareness: Item-category relations do not enhance recall if the subject is not aware of them. The results of the four experiments imply that semantic categories can be primed as implicit associative responses to words, which influence memory.
在列表学习实验中,针对某一项目提出的定向问题可能会影响列表中后续项目的加工和记忆。四项实验表明,与自身定向问题无关,但与前一个项目所问问题语义相关的单词,比列表中与任何问题都无关的单词更容易被回忆起来。影响这种记忆增强的因素包括学习过程中相关定向问题出现的次数以及保持间隔。实验4表明,这种效应取决于意识觉知:如果受试者没有意识到项目类别关系,那么它们不会增强回忆。这四项实验的结果表明,语义类别可以作为对单词的内隐联想反应而被启动,从而影响记忆。