Sensitivity of item memory to fluency: Evidence from behavioral data and ERP old/new effects.

IF 0.8 4区 医学 Q4 NEUROSCIENCES
D Zhang, A Nie, Y Xiao, M Li, X Zhu, M Li
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Previous studies have suggested that item memory is processed based on both familiarity and recollection, and evidence can be found from behavioral as well as event-related potential (ERP) patterns. Recently, great consideration has been given to how the memory of items generated from internal and external sources differ from each other. To date, the modulation of fluency, perceptual fluency in particular, on item memory has been rarely explored from both behavioral and neural perspectives. To address these issues, an ERP experiment was conducted.

Methods: Stimuli were encoded in the status of perceived vs. imagined, of either high or low frequency, manipulated by times of exposure (once or twice). Subsequent memory for the items was tested, during which ERP signals were recorded.

Results and conclusion: The findings of the old/new effects reveal the distinctiveness between perceived and imagined items, and demonstrate an influence of fluency, with higher accuracy for items of high fluency than those low fluent ones. The sensitivity of item memory to fluency was discussed in terms of the dual-process model, together with other possible accounts.

项目记忆对流畅性的敏感性:来自行为数据和ERP新旧效应的证据。
背景:以往的研究表明,项目记忆是基于熟悉和回忆两种模式进行的,从行为模式和事件相关电位(ERP)模式中可以找到证据。最近,人们开始考虑从内部和外部来源产生的项目的记忆如何彼此不同。迄今为止,很少从行为和神经的角度来探讨流畅性,特别是知觉流畅性对项目记忆的调节。为了解决这些问题,进行了ERP实验。方法:以感知与想象、高频率或低频率的状态对刺激进行编码,并通过暴露次数(一次或两次)进行操纵。随后对这些项目的记忆进行测试,在此期间记录ERP信号。结果与结论:新旧效应的发现揭示了感知和想象项目之间的显著性,并证实了流畅性的影响,高流畅性项目的准确性高于低流畅性项目。根据双过程模型和其他可能的解释,讨论了项目记忆对流畅性的敏感性。
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来源期刊
Archives Italiennes De Biologie
Archives Italiennes De Biologie 医学-神经科学
CiteScore
2.10
自引率
30.00%
发文量
12
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Archives Italiennes de Biologie - a Journal of Neuroscience- was founded in 1882 and represents one of the oldest neuroscience journals in the world. Archives publishes original contributions in all the fields of neuroscience, including neurophysiology, experimental neuroanatomy and electron microscopy, neurobiology, neurochemistry, molecular biology, genetics, functional brain imaging and behavioral science. Archives Italiennes de Biologie also publishes monographic special issues that collect papers on a specific topic of interest in neuroscience as well as the proceedings of important scientific events. Archives Italiennes de Biologie is published in 4 issues per year and is indexed in the major collections of biomedical journals, including Medline, PubMed, Current Contents, Excerpta Medica.
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