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The role of familiarity in implicit memory effects: the case of exemplar activation

โœ Scribed by Luigi Castelli; Cristina Zogmaister


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2000
Tongue
English
Weight
131 KB
Volume
30
Category
Article
ISSN
0046-2772

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โœฆ Synopsis


The present study investigates how person-based representations stored in memory can inยฏuence subsequent information processing, depending upon subjective states during recollection of those representations. The experiment consisted of two phases. In the ยฎrst phase, participants incidentally learned the gender category membership of various exemplars. Exemplars were presented in the form of forenameยฑsurname associations. In the second phase, the same surnames were used as primes in a name-completion task. Results showed that the inยฏuence of the primes diered in relation to the exemplars' status in memory, as assessed by a recognition memory task. Only when the surnames looked familiar, but were not identiยฎable, an implicit eect of the exemplars' original category membership emerged, selectively inยฏuencing gender congruent namecompletions. Results are discussed in terms of attribution processes underlying the importance of the feelings of familiarity, and the need to devote more attention to the study of phenomenological factors in human memory.


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