Authors
Michael C Anderson, Collin Green, Kathleen C McCulloch
Publication date
2000/9
Journal
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition
Volume
26
Issue
5
Pages
1141
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
Recalling a past experience often requires the suppression of related memories that compete with the retrieval target, causing memory impairment known as retrieval-induced forgetting. Two experiments examined how retrieval-induced forgetting varies with the similarity of the competitor and the target item (target-competitor similarity) and with the similarity between the competitors themselves (competitor-competitor similarity). According to the pattern-suppression model (MC Anderson & BA Spellman, 1995), high target-competitor similarity should reduce impairment, whereas high competitor-competitor similarity should increase it. Both predictions were supported: Encoding target-competitor similarities not only eliminated retrieval-induced forgetting but also reversed it, whereas encoding competitor-competitor similarities increased impairment. The differing effects of target-competitor and competitor-competitor …
Total citations
200120022003200420052006200720082009201020112012201320142015201620172018201920202021202220232024747129141617161182117182110124589473
Scholar articles
MC Anderson, C Green, KC McCulloch - Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory …, 2000