کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
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932060 | 923064 | 2012 | 22 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |

Two ways to examine memory for associative relationships between pairs of words were tested: an explicit method, associative recognition, and an implicit method, priming in item recognition. In an experiment with both kinds of tests, participants were asked to learn pairs of words. For the explicit test, participants were asked to decide whether two words of a test pair had been studied in the same or different pairs. For the implicit test, participants were asked to decide whether single words had or had not been among the studied pairs. Some test words were immediately preceded in the test list by the other word of the same pair and some by a word from a different pair. Diffusion model (Ratcliff, 1978 and Ratcliff and McKoon, 2008) analyses were carried out for both tasks for college-age participants, 60–74 year olds, and 75–90 year olds, and for higher- and lower-IQ participants, in order to compare the two measures of associative strength. Results showed parallel behavior of drift rates for associative recognition and priming across ages and across IQ, indicating that they are based, at least to some degree, on the same information in memory.
► We examined associative recognition and episodic priming in a word pairs memory task.
► We manipulated age, IQ, and word relatedness.
► Diffusion model fits addressed both accuracy and reaction time data.
► Diffusion model analyses solved scaling issues.
Journal: Journal of Memory and Language - Volume 66, Issue 3, April 2012, Pages 416–437