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Asymmetric interference effects in fragment completion: The consequences of recognition failures and successes
MAURA PILOTTI
Dowling College
MARTIN CHODOROW
Hunter College of CUNY
KENDELL C. THORNTON
Dowling College
We examined the extent
to which implicit and explicit memory performance is susceptible to the
effects of proactive and retroactive interference produced by orthographic
similarity. Participants studied target and nontarget words that were
orthographically similar or dissimilar. At test, they were given fragments
of the target words intermixed with fragments of nonstudied words. Participants'
initial task was to determine whether each fragment was a studied word.
If they recognized it, they were to complete the fragment with the studied
word; if not, they were to complete the fragment with the first word that
came to mind. Completion rates including both recognized and nonrecognized
target fragments provided evidence of proactive but not retroactive interference.
The implicit processing engaged by the nonrecognized target fragments
was found to be the primary source of the proactive interference effect.
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