“…The animacy effect has been replicated across a variety of experiments, including with recognition memory (Bonin, Gelin, & Bugaiska, 2014), independent of encoding instructions (Gelin, Bugaiska, Méot, & Bonin, 2017;Leding, 2018), for picture stimuli (Bonin et al, 2014), and with children participants (Aslan & John, 2016; see Nairne, VanArsdall, & Cogdill, 2017 for a review). Popp and Serra (2016) further explored the effect of animacy and created a normed list of animate and inanimate items where the two lists were equated on the characteristics of length, frequency, mental imagery, and concreteness. They found the animacy effect in free recall but found that cued recall was typically impaired when animate items were included in the pairs, except in a condition where Swahili words were paired with animate English words, similar to the results of VanArsdall, Nairne, Pandeirada, and Cogdill (2015).…”