Implicit and explicit memory for visual patterns.
Form Perception
Male
03 medical and health sciences
Time Factors
0302 clinical medicine
Consciousness
Pattern Recognition, Visual
Memory
Humans
Female
Cues
DOI:
10.1037/0278-7393.16.1.127
Publication Date:
2005-09-15T15:38:33Z
AUTHORS (2)
ABSTRACT
The article reports an investigation of implicit and explicit memory for novel, visual patterns. Implicit memory was assessed by a speeded perception task, and explicit memory by a four-alternative, forced-choice recognition task. Tests were given either immediately after testing or 7 days later. The results suggest that a single exposure of a novel, nonverbal stimulus is sufficient to establish a representation in memory that is capable of supporting long-lived perceptual priming. In contrast, recognition memory showed significant loss over the same delay. Performance measures in the two tasks showed stochastic independence on the first trial after a single exposure to each pattern. Finally, a specific occurrence of a previously studied item could be retrieved from explicit memory but did not affect the accuracy of perception in the implicit memory test. The results extend the domain of experimental dissociations between explicit and implicit memory to include novel, nonverbal stimuli.
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