Traditional procedures and theories from adult free recall are reviewed, along with their implications for developmental free recall. Contemporary free-recall research in children is presented as well as some discussion of important developmental variables. The need for a developmental theory to guide free-recall research in children is also discussed.
Exp. I varied instructional sets in free recall, with Ss instructed to combine words into sentences, mental pictures, both, or left to their own strategy. The Pictures group was superior on both high- and low-imagery items. There was no evidence for summadon of availability for Ss with both, or for superiority of the Sentences group on low-imagery items. Low-imagery words tended to be recalled early on acquisition trials but be late in output on a delayed test. The second experiment used only own strategy and pictures instructions for lists varying orthogonally on imagery and frequency, with half of the Ss in each group informed of the general list composition. The latter seemed to have no effect, and the pictures set was effective only for high-imagery items. The priority effects were most pronounced for the low-imagery—high frequency subset.
Groups with preliminary free recall were added to an experiment testing the position hypothesis in serial to paired-associate transfer . The Ss with paired-associate lists that had pa irings related to the serial list positions did better than all other groups, indicating that such differences are not completely attributable to interference in previous studies.
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