University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon, 97403.
Mem Cognit. 1973 Dec;1(4):430-4. doi: 10.3758/BF03208903.
Three experiments were conducted to capitalize on the conclusion of Shaffer and Shiffrin (1972) that complex visual scenes are not rehearsed in testing the hypothesis that the effect of spacing on memory is due to rehearsal. In Experiment I, a list of vacation slides was presented in which both the number of repetitions and the spacing of repetitions were varied. Subsequent frequency judgments showed an effect of spacing much like that found using verbal materials. In Experiments II and III, effects of filled and unfilled spacing intervals were compared, and it was concluded that the spacing effect is primarily a function of the duration of the spacing interval. No evidence was found to support the notion that pictures are rehearsed. Rehearsal apparently cannot play the key role in an adequate, completely general explanation of the spacing effect.
进行了三个实验,以利用 Shaffer 和 Shiffrin(1972)的结论,即复杂的视觉场景在测试间隔对记忆的影响是由于复述的假设时不会被复述。在实验一,幻灯片列表呈现,其中重复的次数和重复的间隔都发生了变化。随后的频率判断显示了类似于使用口头材料的间隔效应。在实验二和实验三中,比较了填充和非填充间隔的效果,并得出结论,间隔效应主要是间隔时间的函数。没有证据表明图片被复述。复述显然不能在对间隔效应的充分、完全普遍的解释中发挥关键作用。