Does semantic similarity affect immediate memory for order? Usually not, but sometimes it does.
Benjamin Kowialiewski, Steve Majerus, Klaus Oberauer
Abstract
, rather than decrease, order memory. Second, semantic knowledge reliably constrains the way items migrate; when migrating, items tend to do so more often toward the position of other similar items, rather than migrating toward other dissimilar items. These results challenge the way current models of WM represent similarity. The plausibility of different theoretical accounts and mechanisms is discussed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
Topics & Concepts
RecallSimilarity (geometry)Semantic similaritySemantic memorySerial position effectPsychologyNatural language processingPsycINFOSemantics (computer science)Affect (linguistics)Cognitive psychologyOrder (exchange)Information retrievalComputer scienceArtificial intelligenceFree recallCommunicationCognitionMEDLINEEconomicsPolitical scienceImage (mathematics)NeuroscienceProgramming languageLawFinanceNeurobiology of Language and BilingualismTopic ModelingMemory Processes and Influences