Modality and phonological similarity effects in serial recall: Does one's own voice play a role?

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Abstract

Results of two experiments showed that the modality effect in serial recall of word lists is sharply reduced by high interitem phonological similarity and that the extent of this reduction is much the same irrespective of whether the lists are spoken by the subject or the experimenter. These findings contradict an account of the modality effect recently proposed by Richardson (1979), but the data are entirely consistent with the belief that the effect originates in echoic memory. © 1982 Psychonomic Society, Inc.

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Gathercole, S. E., Gardiner, J. M., & Gregg, V. H. (1982). Modality and phonological similarity effects in serial recall: Does one’s own voice play a role? Memory & Cognition, 10(2), 176–180. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03209219

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