Sebrechts M M, Marsh R L, Seamon J G
Mem Cognit. 1989 Nov;17(6):693-700. doi: 10.3758/bf03202630.
Studies of recall in the absence of expectancy (e.g., Muter, 1980) have suggested that forgetting from primary memory is much more rapid than previously assumed. Two experiments examined the role of secondary memory, as reflected by encoding strategies, in determining this rate of forgetting. Experiment 1 demonstrated that the type of encoding specified by orienting tasks can influence recall in a traditional Brown-Peterson task. Experiment 2 demonstrated a similar pattern of effects of orienting task in the Muter task when recall was not expected, despite much more rapid forgetting. The type of encoding engaged by the orienting tasks did not account for Muter's results. Expectancy and orienting task appear to have separable influences on resource allocation during encoding. The presence of secondary memory influences at even the shortest retention interval indicates that forgetting from primary memory may be even more rapid than has been proposed.
在没有预期的情况下进行的回忆研究(例如,穆特,1980年)表明,从初级记忆中遗忘的速度比之前假设的要快得多。两项实验考察了由编码策略反映的次级记忆在确定这种遗忘速度中的作用。实验1表明,定向任务所指定的编码类型会影响传统布朗-彼得森任务中的回忆。实验2表明,在穆特任务中,当没有预期回忆时,尽管遗忘速度更快,但定向任务也会产生类似的效应模式。定向任务所采用的编码类型并不能解释穆特的研究结果。预期和定向任务似乎在编码过程中对资源分配有可分离的影响。即使在最短的保持间隔中也存在次级记忆影响,这表明从初级记忆中遗忘的速度可能比之前提出的还要快。