1. Encoding–Retrieval Interactions
- Author
-
Henry L. Roediger, Oyku Uner, and Eylul Tekin
- Subjects
Information retrieval ,business.industry ,Context-dependent memory ,05 social sciences ,Data_CODINGANDINFORMATIONTHEORY ,computer.software_genre ,050105 experimental psychology ,Encoding specificity principle ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Dimension (vector space) ,State dependent ,Encoding (memory) ,Line (geometry) ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Artificial intelligence ,Psychology ,business ,computer ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Natural language processing - Abstract
The encoding–retrieval paradigm is instantiated when two (or more) conditions are manipulated during study (or encoding) and two or more types of tests are used to assess retention (retrieval tests). This type of experiment permits answers to two fundamental questions: Do effects of an encoding manipulation that occur on one test generalize across other tests? When encoding and retrieval conditions match on some dimension, does better performance occur than when they mismatch (in line with principles of encoding specificity and transfer-appropriate processing)? The encoding–retrieval paradigm is essential to progress in understanding memory.
- Published
- 2017