Pages that link to "Q56851400"
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The following pages link to A theory for the storage and retrieval of item and associative information (Q56851400):
Displaying 72 items.
- Word frequency and list composition effects in associative recognition and recall (Q46094664) (← links)
- Neural correlates of memory for items and for associations: an event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging study (Q46436653) (← links)
- The generation effect and the modeling of associations in memory (Q46588361) (← links)
- Probative value of absolute and relative judgments in eyewitness identification (Q46692010) (← links)
- List length and overlap effects in forced-choice associative recognition (Q46708811) (← links)
- Set-size effects in primary memory: an age-related capacity limitation? (Q47178021) (← links)
- Left-Corner Parsing With Distributed Associative Memory Produces Surprisal and Locality Effects (Q47328574) (← links)
- Overcoming the effects of intentional forgetting (Q48157860) (← links)
- A hybrid neural network of addressable and content-addressable memory (Q48242880) (← links)
- The representation of egocentric space in the posterior parietal cortex (Q48396495) (← links)
- Does the nervous system use equilibrium-point control to guide single and multiple joint movements? (Q48396504) (← links)
- Modelling serial position curves with temporal distinctiveness (Q48654587) (← links)
- Using response time modeling to distinguish memory and decision processes in recognition and source tasks (Q50643106) (← links)
- Associations compete directly in memory (Q50684470) (← links)
- Optimization and quantization in gradient symbol systems: a framework for integrating the continuous and the discrete in cognition. (Q50703397) (← links)
- Associative recognition and the list strength paradigm. (Q50704233) (← links)
- Visual search enhances subsequent mnemonic search. (Q50743942) (← links)
- Interference and the representation of order within associations. (Q50801658) (← links)
- Unmasking a shady mirror effect: recognition of normal versus obscured faces. (Q50977517) (← links)
- The role of stimulus type in list length effects in recognition memory. (Q50978614) (← links)
- Precise instructions determine participants' memory search strategy in judgments of relative order in short lists. (Q51889836) (← links)
- Context, remember-know recognition judgements, and ROC parameters. (Q51901780) (← links)
- Sharpening the echo: an iterative-resonance model for short-term recognition memory. (Q51929214) (← links)
- Experimental manipulation of prior experience: Effects on item and associative recognition. (Q51947298) (← links)
- Associative asymmetry in probed recall of serial lists. (Q51952085) (← links)
- Encoding and output order processes in short-term order recall of distinctive items. (Q51961440) (← links)
- Recognition and position information in working memory for visual textures. (Q51965359) (← links)
- Strength-based mirror effects in item and associative recognition: evidence for within-list criterion changes. (Q51971824) (← links)
- On the flexibility and the fallibility of associative memory. (Q51972844) (← links)
- Landmarks as beacons and associative cues: their role in route learning. (Q51976212) (← links)
- Reversing the picture superiority effect: a speed-accuracy trade-off study of recognition memory. (Q51984740) (← links)
- Modeling recognition memory using the similarity structure of natural input. (Q51985861) (← links)
- Shades of the mirror effect: recognition of faces with and without sunglasses. (Q51986387) (← links)
- On the importance of models in interpreting remember-know experiments: comments on Gardiner et al.'s (2002) meta-analysis. (Q51989881) (← links)
- Pairs do not suffer interference from other types of pairs or single items in associative recognition. (Q51992001) (← links)
- Retrieval dynamics in recognition and list discrimination: further evidence of separate processes of familiarity and recall. (Q51993960) (← links)
- The detection model of recognition using know and remember judgments. (Q51994525) (← links)
- Study time effects in recognition memory. (Q52000590) (← links)
- The effects of divided attention at encoding on item and associative memory. (Q52003390) (← links)
- Tests of the separate retrieval of item and associative information using a frequency-judgment task. (Q52006500) (← links)
- A front end to a theory of picture recognition. (Q52010907) (← links)
- Forgetting curves: implications for connectionist models. (Q52011601) (← links)
- Developing TODAM: three models for serial-order information. (Q52014144) (← links)
- Feature sampling in categorization and recognition of objects. (Q52014151) (← links)
- Mathematical and connectionist models of human memory: a comparison. (Q52015718) (← links)
- The variance theory of the mirror effect in recognition memory. (Q52016372) (← links)
- An autoassociative neural network model of paired-associate learning. (Q52017884) (← links)
- When encoding fails: instructions, feedback, and registration without learning. (Q52018176) (← links)
- When does a different environmental context make a difference in recognition? A global activation model. (Q52023705) (← links)
- Associative symmetry and memory theory. (Q52027695) (← links)
- Identifying exceptions in a database of recognition failure studies from 1973 to 1992. (Q52036516) (← links)
- Basis of recency and frequency judgements of novel faces: generalised strength or episode-specific memories? (Q52044380) (← links)
- An analysis of errors in the learning, overlearning, and forgetting of sequences. (Q52048326) (← links)
- The replacement effect: Repeating some items while replacing others (Q52070956) (← links)
- The representation and integration in memory of spatial and nonspatial information (Q52071930) (← links)
- Recognition of multiple-item probes. (Q52073647) (← links)
- Memory-conjunction errors: miscombination of stored stimulus features can produce illusions of memory. (Q52080527) (← links)
- Associative and serial-order information: different modes of operation? (Q52092259) (← links)
- Recognition memory: a cue and information analysis. (Q52094214) (← links)
- Word repetitions in sentence recognition. (Q52100097) (← links)
- The effect of feature frequency on short-term recognition memory. (Q52105449) (← links)
- Judgments of recency and their relation to recognition memory (Q52106672) (← links)
- Order and serial position effects in response time with multiple-item probe recognition (Q52124012) (← links)
- Encoding, repetition, and the mirror effect in recognition memory: symmetry in motion. (Q52192456) (← links)
- An analysis of the strength-latency relationship. (Q52204813) (← links)
- Reflections of the mirror effect for item and associative recognition. (Q52213410) (← links)
- Further tests of an exemplar-similarity approach to relating identification and categorization. (Q52246853) (← links)
- Fuzzy-Trace Theory: Dual Processes in Memory, Reasoning, and Cognitive Neuroscience (Q56851388) (← links)
- Short-Term Memory: New Data and a Model (Q57732070) (← links)
- Does a computational theory of human memory need intelligence? (Q57771588) (← links)
- Levels of research (Q61241931) (← links)
- Testing a Strategy-Disruption Account of the List-Strength Effect (Q101042102) (← links)