Absence of a Cross-Modal “Suffix Effect” in Short-Term Memory

Author:

Morton John1,Holloway C. M.1

Affiliation:

1. Medical Research Council, Applied Psychology Unit, Cambridge

Abstract

Three experiments are reported involving the presentation of lists of either letters or digits for immediate serial recall. The main variable was the presence or absence of a suffix-prefix, an item (tick or cross) occurring at the end of the list which had to be copied before recall of the stimulus list. With auditory stimuli and an auditory suffix-prefix there was a large and selective increase in the number of errors on the last few serial positions—the typical “suffix effect”. The suffix effect was not found with auditory stimuli and a visual suffix-prefix nor with a visual stimulus and an auditory suffix-prefix. These results are interpreted as supporting a model for short-term memory proposed by Crowder and Morton (1969) in which it is suggested that with serial recall information concerning the final items following auditory presentation has a different, precategorical, origin from that concerning other items.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

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1. Modality effects in free recall: A retrieved-context account.;Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition;2022-07-04

2. Similarities between the irrelevant sound effect and the suffix effect;Memory & Cognition;2018-03-29

3. Common modality effects in immediate free recall and immediate serial recall.;Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition;2017-12

4. Can the Irrelevant Speech Effect Turn into a Stimulus Suffix Effect?;Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology;2008-05

5. Precategorical acoustic storage and the perception of speech;Journal of Memory and Language;2008-04

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