How Well Can Visual Memory be Measured? |
From inside the book
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Page 6
... cue anticipation is possible , all that is demonstrated is that subjects can see any part of the display as long as they know where to look in advance ; not that they initially have available more letters than they can report . Cue ...
... cue anticipation is possible , all that is demonstrated is that subjects can see any part of the display as long as they know where to look in advance ; not that they initially have available more letters than they can report . Cue ...
Page 7
... cue anticipation is not possible . However , many investigators have either not reported their cue randomization procedures adequately ( Averbach and Sperling , 1961 ; Sperling , 1963 ; Dick , 1971 ) , or have constrained the cue ...
... cue anticipation is not possible . However , many investigators have either not reported their cue randomization procedures adequately ( Averbach and Sperling , 1961 ; Sperling , 1963 ; Dick , 1971 ) , or have constrained the cue ...
Page 12
... cue sequences were random with replacement . Nevertheless , normal partial report superiority is obtained . Therefore , in reply to Objection 1 , partial report superiority does not appear to depend on cue anticipation made possible by ...
... cue sequences were random with replacement . Nevertheless , normal partial report superiority is obtained . Therefore , in reply to Objection 1 , partial report superiority does not appear to depend on cue anticipation made possible by ...
Contents
Visual codes | 4 |
EXPERIMENT | 5 |
Individual subject data for partialwhole report | 11 |
Copyright | |
6 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
00 XX XX auditory Chow and Murdock click procedure Coltheart consonants cue anticipation cue sequence dark adapted dark background Dick Doost and Turvey e.g. AA effect experimental trials Figure four greater than zero immediate-memory span letter match task letters available letters cued measure iconic memory measure of iconic memory load monotonically decreasing msec ISI name match NM PM NM-RTPM number of letters OX XO OX XX partial and whole partial report procedure partial report superiority partial-whole report physical match possible practice trials random recall replication responses RT RT RT-RT RTCM RTDIFF-RTPM RTNM RTNM-RTPM RTPM RTVCM RTVCM-RTPM RTVM Sakitt and Appelman second letter single letter SOA(SEC stimuli subsidiary task tachistoscope tone trial types trials ISI visual code visual image visual memory vowels whole report condition whole report data whole report trials XO OX XO XX XX OX XX XO XX XX 00 XX XX XX ΧΟ