Dissociations Between Familiarity Processes in Explicit Recognition and Implicit Perceptual Memory (1997)
| Citations: | 9 - 2 self |
BibTeX
@MISC{Wagner97dissociationsbetween,
author = {Anthony D. Wagner and Stanford Universgy and John D. E. Gabrieli and Mieke Veffaellie},
title = {Dissociations Between Familiarity Processes in Explicit Recognition and Implicit Perceptual Memory},
year = {1997}
}
OpenURL
Abstract
this article, recollection and familiarity have been considered from the framework of dual-process models of recognition memory. Recollection and familiarity have been assumed to be functionally independent and discrete processes that mediate memory pedormance. Within this framework, recollection reflects the controlled reuieval of episodic information, whereas familiarity reflects automatic undifferenfiated feelings of memory. The present results, considered within this framework, suggest that both of these bases of recognition are reliant on conceptual processes and, further, that the familiarity process contributing to recognition is functionally distinct from perceptual repetition prim- ing







