A study was designed to test whether anterograde impairments of memory caused by benzodiazepines are dependent on the depth at which information is processed. The effects of two dose levels of two benzodiazepines (loraxpam I , 2mg; oxarepam 15, 30mg) and a placebo were compared using a double-blind,
Levels-of-Processing Effects on a Variety of Memory Tasks: New Findings and Theoretical Implications
✍ Scribed by Bradford H. Challis; Boris M. Velichkovsky; Fergus I.M. Craik
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 116 KB
- Volume
- 5
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1053-8100
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Three experiments investigated level of processing (LOP) effects on a variety of direct and indirect memory tasks, in the context of a processing theory of dissociations. Subjects studied words in five encoding conditions and received one of ten memory tests. In Experiment 1, four tests previously classified as conceptual showed a robust LOP effect, as did a direct perceptual test of graphemic cued recall. An indirect perceptual word fragment completion test was unaffected by LOP. Experiment 2 showed that a new indirect version of a graphemic cued test was not affected by LOP. In Experiment 3, guided by a generation/recognition model, we constructed three new direct tests in which subjects identified words that were graphemically, phonologically, or semantically similar to studied words. The three tests differed in their sensitivity to study conditions, but LOP had no effect in any case, despite the involvement of deliberate conscious recollection. Contemporary explanatory frameworks couched as dichotomies (e.g., implicit/explicit, perceptual/conceptual) do not provide an adequate account of the results. It seems necessary instead to specify the types of information activated by each encoding condition, the types of information required by each test, and how encoding and retrieval processes are modified by task instructions.
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