Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
881542 Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition 2016 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

•The effects of presentation modality on the testing effect were examined.•No modality by testing effect interactions was found.•Initial testing provides equal, but not greater benefits to later retrieval.

We examined whether the testing effect generalizes to an auditory presentation modality. Five lists of unrelated words (Experiment 1) and related words (Experiment 2) were presented to participants, half of whom studied them visually and half studied them auditorily. Participants in the study-only condition performed a short distractor task following lists 1–4, whereas those in the testing condition completed a short distractor task and then attempted to recall each list. Both groups were subsequently tested on List 5 and on all five lists 30 min later. In both experiments, we found a testing effect for both List 5 and for the final cumulative recall test. However, the effect did not interact with study modality, despite the fact that proactive interference was greater following auditory study. These results have important implications for educational practice, suggesting that initial testing is important for materials presented in auditory as well as visual formats.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Applied Psychology
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