2006
DOI: 10.1016/j.jml.2006.08.001
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Modeling age-related differences in immediate memory using SIMPLE

Abstract: In the SIMPLE model (Scale Invariant Memory and Perceptual Learning), performance on memory tasks is determined by the locations of items in multidimensional space, and better performance is associated with having fewer close neighbors. Unlike most previous simulations with SIMPLE, the ones reported here used measured, rather than assumed, dimensional values. The data to be modeled come from an experiment in which younger and older adults recalled lists of acoustically confusable and non-confusable items. A mu… Show more

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Cited by 36 publications
(43 citation statements)
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“…In contrast, these results are consistent with the predictions of the relative distinctiveness principle (e.g., Kelley et al, 2013;Neath et al, 2006;Neath & Saint-Aubin, 2011;Surprenant, Neath & Brown, 2006). According to this view, serial position functions arise when items are ordered along one or more dimensions regardless of the hypothetical underlying memory system.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 82%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In contrast, these results are consistent with the predictions of the relative distinctiveness principle (e.g., Kelley et al, 2013;Neath et al, 2006;Neath & Saint-Aubin, 2011;Surprenant, Neath & Brown, 2006). According to this view, serial position functions arise when items are ordered along one or more dimensions regardless of the hypothetical underlying memory system.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 82%
“…The particular dimension(s) can vary: for example, in episodic tasks, the dimension is usually temporal (i.e., relative time), but need not be; items can be ordered along perceptual dimensions or a position dimension (Surprenant et al, 2006) or any other dimension that is useful. In semantic tasks, the ordering is less likely to be temporally-based and more likely to be a nominal or logical ordering (e.g., the second verse follows the first verse); time per se is not a factor.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…SIMPLE represents items as points along a dimension (or points in multi-dimensional space) where the dimension depends on the task. In the typical episodic task, relative time is frequently the dimension but in other settings, the dimension may be serial position (see Surprenant, Neath, & Brown, 2006) or some perceptual dimension (Neath, Brown, McCormack, Chater, & Freeman, 2006). The values on this dimension are log transformed (see Brown et al, 2007, for a detailed discussion) and performance depends on the relative distinctiveness of these log-transformed values.…”
Section: Serial Position Functions and Distinctivenessmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is also possible, in principle, to get more objective information about the dimensions. For example, Surprenant, Neath, and Brown (2006) used multidimensional scaling to obtain the main dimensions, and then used those derived dimensions in the model. Whereas their MDS solution yielded only 2 dimensions, such procedures can be extended to include more than 2 dimensions.…”
Section: Simple and Brown-peterson Complex Span And Continual Distrmentioning
confidence: 99%