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Forgetting is a complex cognitive phenomenon influenced by several factors, among which interference and decay are particularly prominent. These processes explain why individuals often struggle to retrieve specific information from memory, leading to lapses in recall that can be observed in everyday situations.
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Language serves as a bridge between ideas and communication, influencing how individuals perceive and interact with the world. Psychologists have long debated whether language shapes thought or vice versa. This discussion gained grip with Edward Sapir and Benjamin Lee Whorf in the 1940s, who proposed that language determines thought, a concept known as linguistic determinism. They suggested that the vocabulary and structure of a language influence how its speakers think and perceive reality.
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Forgetting is an intrinsic aspect of human memory, characterized by the gradual loss or inaccessibility of information over time. Hermann Ebbinghaus, a pioneering psychologist, extensively studied this phenomenon and formulated the forgetting curve. This curve illustrates that memory loss occurs rapidly immediately after learning and then decelerates over time. Several mechanisms contribute to forgetting, including encoding failure, storage decay, retrieval failure, and interference.
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Retrieval01:12

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Retrieval is the process of getting information out of memory storage and back into conscious awareness. This ability is essential for daily tasks like brushing hair and teeth, driving to work, and performing job duties. Retrieval occurs in three ways: recall, recognition, and relearning.
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E. C. Tolman emphasized the purposiveness of behavior — the idea that much of our behavior is goal-directed. For instance, employees who aim for a promotion work diligently to meet their targets. Tolman argued that when classical conditioning and operant conditioning occur, the organism acquires certain expectations. In classical conditioning, a child might fear a dog because they expect it to bite. In operant conditioning, a person might consistently work overtime because they expect a...
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jul 19, 2025

Examining Bilingual Language Control Using the Stroop Task
05:31

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Language-switching and retrieval-based learning: an unfavorable combination.

Moritz Wußing1, Roland H Grabner2, Hannah Sommer2

  • 1Faculty of Education, Leipzig University, Leipzig, Germany.

Frontiers in Psychology
|August 11, 2023
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Language switching during learning, especially before subsequent learning, hinders memory recall. Retrieval-based learning, while effective, is particularly vulnerable to these language-switching costs, impacting educational strategies.

Keywords:
bilingual learningencoding specificitylanguage dependencylanguage-switching costsmathematical learningretrieval-based learningsubsequent learning

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Educational Psychology
  • Second Language Acquisition

Background:

  • Language-switching costs occur when information learned in one language is recalled in another.
  • The encoding specificity principle suggests language-dependent memory representations underlie these costs.
  • Understanding the impact of language-switching on learning is crucial for educational design.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To test the encoding specificity principle as a mechanism for language-switching costs.
  • To investigate the impact of language-switching timing on subsequent learning.
  • To examine the interaction between retrieval-based learning and language-switching.

Main Methods:

  • A 2x3 design study with 117 participants learning mathematical concepts.
  • Within-subjects factor: retrieval-based learning (testing-effect) vs. restudy.
  • Between-subjects factor: three language-switching conditions (no switch, switch at final test, switch between learning phases).

Main Results:

  • Retrieval-based learning improved performance (testing-effect).
  • Language-switching negatively impacted performance (language-switching costs).
  • A significant interaction revealed retrieval-based learning is particularly susceptible to language-switching costs.
  • Switching languages before subsequent learning was most detrimental.

Conclusions:

  • Results validate encoding specificity as the mechanism behind language-switching costs.
  • The timing of language-switching significantly affects learning outcomes.
  • Findings offer insights for optimizing educational programs like Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL).