Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
881675 Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition 2014 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Directly compared Bartlett's procedures of serial and repeated reproduction.•Obtained greater forgetting and false recall with serial reproduction.•Repeated reproduction maintains the general theme of information better.•Conceptual replication of Bartlett's (1932) research.

Bartlett developed the procedures of repeated reproduction (the same person repeatedly recalling information) and serial reproduction (people transmitting information from one person to another). Our experiment directly compared recall accuracy across these two techniques, which has not previously been reported, using DRM word lists. Recall of the initial study list words remained constant across repeated reproductions but declined markedly across serial reproductions. In contrast, recall of associated words that were not originally studied (i.e. critical words) was steady across both conditions. Because more of the original list words were forgotten across each link of the serial reproduction chain, the proportion of critical items recalled (relative to list words) increased significantly as the list passed between people. Using output bound scoring, serial reproduction resulted in lower accuracy than repeated reproduction by the final recall trial. Our results are broadly consistent with Bartlett's (1932) informal observations: Serial reproduction produces greater forgetting of the original material than does repeated reproduction and also leads to greater distortion relative to the proportion of correct material recalled.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Applied Psychology
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