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An expectancy model for memory search.

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This summary is machine-generated.

This study proposes a memory search model where participants form expectancies before searching memory. Expected items show a slight speed advantage, supporting a serial exhaustive search process.

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Human Memory Research
  • Experimental Psychology

Background:

  • Understanding the cognitive mechanisms underlying memory search is crucial for cognitive psychology.
  • Previous models often treated memory search processes uniformly, regardless of item predictability.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To propose and test a novel model of memory search incorporating pre-search expectancies.
  • To investigate whether expectancies influence the speed or process of memory scanning.

Main Methods:

  • Developed a computational model of memory search based on serial exhaustive scanning.
  • Incorporated an 'expectancy' formation stage prior to memory search.
  • Empirically tested the model by having participants vocalize expectancies before trials and measuring response times.

Main Results:

  • The model successfully accounted for existing literature data on memory search.
  • Participants exhibited a consistent, approximately 100-millisecond advantage for expected items.
  • This advantage for expected items was independent of memory load, aligning with model predictions.

Conclusions:

  • Expectancies can facilitate memory search, primarily by speeding up encoding or response initiation.
  • The core memory scanning process appears to be unaffected by item expectancies.
  • The proposed model offers a more nuanced explanation of human memory search dynamics.