Reduction and elimination of format effects on recall / Paula. Goolkasian, Paul W. Foos, Daniel C. Krusemark
Series: The American Journal of Psychology. 121 : 3, pages 377-394 Publication details: Fall 2008Content type:- text
- volume
- unmediated
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Manila Tytana Colleges Library REFERENCE SECTION | Not for loan |
Two experiments investigated whether the recall advantage of pictures and spoken words over printed words in working memory (Foos & Goolkasian, 2005; Goolkasian & Foos, 2002) could be reduced by manipulating letter case and sequential versus simultaneous presentation. Participants were required to remember 3 or 6 items presented in varied presentation formats while verifying the accuracy of a sentence. Presenting words in alternating uppercase and lowercase improved recall, and presenting words simultaneously rather than successively removed the effect of presentation format. The findings suggest that when forcing participants to pay attention to printed words you can make them more memorable and thereby diminish or remove any disadvantage in the recall of printed words in comparison with pictures and spoken words.
Psychology.
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