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Measuring the activation
level of critical lures in the Deese-Roediger-McDermott paradigm
THOMAS W. HANCOCK
University of Georgia
JASON L. HICKS
Louisiana State University
RICHARD L. MARSH and LORIE RITSCHEL
University of Georgia
In four experiments,
the activation level in memory of critical lures was assessed after encoding
Deese-Roediger-McDermott (DRM) lists. The results demonstrated that studying
longer, 14-item lists resulted in superadditive priming of the lures because
they were more available in memory than truly studied items. Studying
shorter DRM lists resulted in activation levels of the lures that was
similar to studied items. Collectively, the results suggest that a first
stage in creating false memories with the DRM paradigm is making the critical
lures highly available in memory during list encoding. Moreover, the results
suggest that false memories are likely to have occurred at the time a
list is studied by a mechanism such as an implicit associative response,
but a monitoring phase at retrieval is acknowledged that could be used
to avoid them. Other theoretical accounts are also considered.
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