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Misremembering What You See or Hear: Dissociable Effects of Modality on Short- and Long-Term False Recognition

False working memories readily emerge using a visual item-recognition variant of the converging associates task. Two experiments, manipulating study and test modality, extended prior working memory results by demonstrating a reliable false recognition effect (more false alarms to associatively relat...

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Published in:Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition memory, and cognition, 2015-09, Vol.41 (5), p.1316-1325
Main Authors: Olszewska, Justyna M, Reuter-Lorenz, Patricia A, Munier, Emily, Bendler, Sara A
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container_title Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition
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creator Olszewska, Justyna M
Reuter-Lorenz, Patricia A
Munier, Emily
Bendler, Sara A
description False working memories readily emerge using a visual item-recognition variant of the converging associates task. Two experiments, manipulating study and test modality, extended prior working memory results by demonstrating a reliable false recognition effect (more false alarms to associatively related lures than to unrelated lures) within seconds of encoding in either the visual or auditory modality. However, false memories were nearly twice as frequent when study lists were seen than when they were heard, regardless of test modality, although study-test modality mismatch was generally disadvantageous (consistent with encoding specificity). A final experiment that varied study-test modality using a hybrid short- and long-term memory test (Flegal, Atkins & Reuter-Lorenz, 2010) replicated the auditory advantage in the short term but revealed a reversal in the long term: The false memory effect was greater in the auditory study-test condition than in the visual study-test condition. Thus, the same encoding conditions gave rise to an opposite modality advantage depending on whether recognition was tested under short-term or long-term memory conditions. Although demonstrating continuity in associative processing across delay, the results indicate that delay condition affects the availability of modality-dependent features of the memory trace and, thus, distinctiveness, leading to dissociable patterns of short- and long-term memory performance.
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subjects Acoustic Stimulation
Adolescent
Analysis of Variance
Association Learning
Associative Learning
Auditory Perception
Auditory Stimulation
Auditory Stimuli
Cognitive ability
College Students
Computer Assisted Testing
Correlation
Experimental psychology
False Memory
Female
Human
Humans
Long Term Memory
Male
Memory
Memory, Long-Term - physiology
Memory, Short-Term - physiology
Michigan
Photic Stimulation
Psychophysics
Reaction Time - physiology
Recall
Recognition
Recognition (Psychology)
Recognition (Psychology) - physiology
Repression, Psychology
Semantics
Short Term Memory
Statistical Analysis
Time Factors
Visual Stimulation
Visual Stimuli
Word Lists
Young Adult
title Misremembering What You See or Hear: Dissociable Effects of Modality on Short- and Long-Term False Recognition
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