False Recognition in DRM Lists with Low Association: A Normative Study
A wide array of studies have explored memory distortions with the Deese/Roediger-McDermott (DRM) paradigm, where participants study lists of words (e.g., door, glass, pane, shade, ledge, etc.) that are associated to another nonpresented critical word (e.g., WINDOW). On a subsequent memory test, the critical word is often falsely recalled and recognized, even though the critical word was not studied. The present normative study provided false recognition indexes for 48 DRM [...]
Geometric Ability and Visuospatial Memory in Adult Population
Un estudio llevado a cabo con una tribu indígena del Amazonas [...]
How Verb Tense Affects the Construal of Action: The Simple Past Tense Leads People into an Abstract Mindset
Two experiments examined the influence of verb tense on how abstractly [...]
Discrimination of Acoustic Patterns in Rats Using the Water T-Maze
The extraction of abstract rules and their generalization to new [...]
A Comparison of Backward Masking of Faces in Expression and Gender Identification
The effects of different masking conditions on identification of face [...]
