Retrieval difficulty and retention of reactivated memories over the first year of life
โ Scribed by Karen Hildreth; Debra Hill
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 204 KB
- Volume
- 43
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0012-1630
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๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
In two experiments with 260 infants between 2 and 12 months of age, we examined how differences between the conditions of encoding and retrieval affect retention. Initially, 9- and 12-month-olds were tested with a different cue (Experiment 1) or in a different context (Experiment 2) after delays spa
## Abstract Exposing individuals to an isolated component (a prime) of a prior event alleviates its forgetting. Two experiments with 120 human infants between 3 and 18 months of age determined the minimum duration of a prime that can reactivate a forgotten memory and how long the reactivated memory
This research documents the development of long-term memory in human infants from 2 months through the end of the first year-and-a-half of life. In the initial study phase, we trained 6-to 18-month-old human infants in an operant task and tested them after increasing delays until they exhibited no r
## Abstract Despite its significance for the enduring effect of early experience, the specificity of priming on infants' forgotten memories is unknown. This study determined the impact of cue and context changes on the initial priming and retrieval of the reactivated memory over the first postnatal