1. Memorable objects are more susceptible to forgetting: Evidence for the inhibitory account of retrieval-induced forgetting.
- Author
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Reppa I, Williams KE, Worth ER, Greville WJ, and Saunders J
- Subjects
- Cues, Female, Humans, Male, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Young Adult, Inhibition, Psychological, Mental Recall
- Abstract
Retrieval of target information can cause forgetting for related, but non-retrieved, information - retrieval-induced forgetting (RIF). The aim of the current studies was to examine a key prediction of the inhibitory account of RIF - interference dependence - whereby 'strong' non-retrieved items are more likely to interfere during retrieval and therefore, are more susceptible to RIF. Using visual objects allowed us to examine and contrast one index of item strength -object typicality, that is, how typical of its category an object is. Experiment 1 provided proof of concept for our variant of the recognition practice paradigm. Experiment 2 tested the prediction of the inhibitory account that the magnitude of RIF for natural visual objects would be dependent on item strength. Non-typical objects were more memorable overall than typical objects. We found that object memorability (as determined by typicality) influenced RIF with significant forgetting occurring for the memorable (non-typical), but not non-memorable (typical), objects. The current findings strongly support an inhibitory account of retrieval-induced forgetting., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
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