Toward a Theory of Redintegrative Memory: Adjective-Noun Phrases1
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Cited by (14)
Chunking and data compression in verbal short-term memory
2021, CognitionCitation Excerpt :The idea that chunking may be a form of data compression conforms to the informal notion that chunks help us squeeze more ‘information’ into a given amount of memory. An alternative view of chunking is that representations of chunks exist only in LTM, but can be used to reconstruct a degraded trace in STM by a process often referred to as redintegration (Brown & Hulme, 1995; Horowitz & Maneils, 1972; Hulme, Maughan, & Brown, 1991; Hulme et al., 1997; Jacobs, Dell, & Bannard, 2017; T. Jones & Farrell, 2018; Lewandowsky & Farrell, 2000; Poirier & Saint-Aubin, 1996; Roodenrys & Miller, 2008; Schweickert, 1993; Stuart & Hulme, 2009; Thorn, Gathercole, & Frankish, 2002). Redintegration offers a simple explanation of the fact that, for example, words are easier to remember than nonwords (Hulme et al., 1991; Hulme, Roodenrys, Brown, & Mercer, 1995) or that STM for high-frequency words is better than for low-frequency words (Hulme et al., 1997), but can apply equally well to chunks at other levels.
Phrase frequency effects in free recall: Evidence for redintegration
2017, Journal of Memory and LanguageCitation Excerpt :This effect demonstrates the influence of redintegrative processes during phrase retrieval. Redintegration refers to a process of pattern completion using information from long-term memory (Horowitz & Maneils, 1972; Schweickert, 1993; Thorn, Gathercole, & Frankish, 2005; Hulme et al., 1997). We propose that specifically in phrase recall, the representations of words that are retrieved during language production cue one another to the extent that they have often co-occurred.
Episodic Components of Concept Learning and Representation
1992, Advances in PsychologyRecognition memory: The probe, the returned signal, and the decision
2023, Psychonomic Bulletin and ReviewQuantifying context with and without statistical language models
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This research was supported in part by Grant MH 16361-02 of the United States Public Health Service. The authors would like to thank Linda Barrack, Steven Burton, Nancy Eisenberg, Howard Frederick, Richard Galbraith, and Joan Scheublein for their help in collecting and analyzing the data.