Investigating strength and frequency effects in recognition memory using type-2 signal detection theory
Investigating strength and frequency effects in recognition memory using type-2 signal detection theory
Criterion- versus distribution-shift accounts of frequency and strength effects in recognition memory were investigated with Type-2 signal detection receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis, which provides a measure of metacognitive monitoring. Experiment 1 demonstrated a frequency-based mirror effect, with a higher hit rate and lower false alarm rate, for low frequency words compared with high frequency words. In Experiment 2, the authors manipulated item strength with repetition, which showed an increased hit rate but no effect on the false alarm rate. Whereas Type-1 indices were ambiguous as to whether these effects were based on a criterion- or distribution-shift model, the two models predict opposite effects on Type-2 distractor monitoring under some assumptions. Hence, Type-2 ROC analysis discriminated between potential models of recognition that could not be discriminated using Type-1 indices alone. In Experiment 3, the authors manipulated Type-1 response bias by varying the number of old versus new response categories to confirm the assumptions made in Experiments 1 and 2. The authors conclude that Type-2 analyses are a useful tool for investigating recognition memory when used in conjunction with more traditional Type-1 analyses.
recognition memory, signal detection theory, mirror effect, type 2, roc analysis
57-80
Higham, P. A.
4093b28f-7d58-4d18-89d4-021792e418e7
Perfect, T. J.
07b196ec-d844-4e97-92fb-b6b08192977c
Bruno, D.
5ca73de2-1706-420b-a7bf-8c6a5e474221
2009
Higham, P. A.
4093b28f-7d58-4d18-89d4-021792e418e7
Perfect, T. J.
07b196ec-d844-4e97-92fb-b6b08192977c
Bruno, D.
5ca73de2-1706-420b-a7bf-8c6a5e474221
Higham, P. A., Perfect, T. J. and Bruno, D.
(2009)
Investigating strength and frequency effects in recognition memory using type-2 signal detection theory.
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 35 (1), .
(doi:10.1037/a0013865).
Abstract
Criterion- versus distribution-shift accounts of frequency and strength effects in recognition memory were investigated with Type-2 signal detection receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis, which provides a measure of metacognitive monitoring. Experiment 1 demonstrated a frequency-based mirror effect, with a higher hit rate and lower false alarm rate, for low frequency words compared with high frequency words. In Experiment 2, the authors manipulated item strength with repetition, which showed an increased hit rate but no effect on the false alarm rate. Whereas Type-1 indices were ambiguous as to whether these effects were based on a criterion- or distribution-shift model, the two models predict opposite effects on Type-2 distractor monitoring under some assumptions. Hence, Type-2 ROC analysis discriminated between potential models of recognition that could not be discriminated using Type-1 indices alone. In Experiment 3, the authors manipulated Type-1 response bias by varying the number of old versus new response categories to confirm the assumptions made in Experiments 1 and 2. The authors conclude that Type-2 analyses are a useful tool for investigating recognition memory when used in conjunction with more traditional Type-1 analyses.
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Published date: 2009
Keywords:
recognition memory, signal detection theory, mirror effect, type 2, roc analysis
Organisations:
Cognition
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Local EPrints ID: 66778
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/66778
ISSN: 0278-7393
PURE UUID: 2ffde749-0cf9-40ca-96b2-d74ec677995b
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Date deposited: 21 Jul 2009
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:45
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Author:
T. J. Perfect
Author:
D. Bruno
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