Abstract
A total of 208 undergraduate participants incidentally encoded a list of seven pairs of familiar words in two experiments. A 30-sec calculation task was imposed before and after each pair was encoded. Participants received a free recall test 24 h (Experiment 1) or 10 min (Experiment 2) after the encoding session, under conditions in which the original environmental context was reinstated or not. The environmental context was manipulated in terms of the combination of the physical features of the room, the subsidiary task conducted, the experimenter (Experiment 1), or background music (Experiment 2). A recency effect appeared when the original environmental context was reinstated in both experiments, even though the IPI/RI ratio was too small to produce recency effects according to the ratio rule. The results imply that the environmental context should be taken into account for the recency effect. Copyright 2006 Psychonomic Society, Inc.
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CITATION STYLE
Isarida, T., & Isarida, T. K. (2006). Influences of environmental context on the recency effect in free recall. Memory and Cognition, 34(4), 787–794. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03193426
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