Publication:
Invariant recognition memory spaces for real-world objects revealed with signal-detection analysis

Placeholder

School / College / Institute

Organizational Unit

Program

KU Authors

Co-Authors

Utochkin, Igor
Azarov, Daniil

Publication Date

Language

Embargo Status

No

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Alternative Title

Abstract

Recognition memory refers to the process of distinguishing between previously experienced and novel events. Apart from the objective quality of stored memories, recognition depends on the retrieval context produced by all items (foils) presented together with actually memorized targets and causing confusion. Memory models often conceptualize target-foil confusability via distances in psychological spaces where greater confusability originates from shorter interitem distances. We tested whether recognition spaces change when other foils are added to the retrieval context or when target memory strength is changed (N = 1,311 adults). Using signal-detection modeling, we found that separately measured distances, d ' s, from each foil to the target provide a good linear prediction of those distances for all foils being presented together against that target. Those predictions stay accurate even when the absolute distances are scaled up or down because of a change in memory strength. This suggests strong metric invariance of spaces used for recognition decisions under variable retrieval contexts.

Source

Publisher

Sage Publications

Subject

Psychology

Citation

Has Part

Source

Psychological Science

Book Series Title

Edition

DOI

10.1177/09567976251384640

item.page.datauri

Link

Rights

CC BY-NC-ND (Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs)

Copyrights Note

Creative Commons license

Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as CC BY-NC-ND (Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs)

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

0

Views

0

Downloads

View PlumX Details