2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.jml.2016.11.007
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Position-element frequency learning is dissociable from Hebb repetition learning

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Cited by 9 publications
(25 citation statements)
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“…Recent studies, however, have reported findings that indicate the possibility of long-term learning of repeated position-item associations. Nakayama and Saito (2017) conducted a series of experiments in which they manipulated the positional frequency of nonwords, presenting some items more frequently at the same serial position in verbal sequences than others, and demonstrated gradual position-item learning in a Hebblike repetition task. Moreover, Majerus and Oberauer (2019) in a series of serial recall tasks using words as memory items, showed that immediate serial recall improved as the same words were consistently presented in the same positions, even though the word-to-word transitions were not repeated.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recent studies, however, have reported findings that indicate the possibility of long-term learning of repeated position-item associations. Nakayama and Saito (2017) conducted a series of experiments in which they manipulated the positional frequency of nonwords, presenting some items more frequently at the same serial position in verbal sequences than others, and demonstrated gradual position-item learning in a Hebblike repetition task. Moreover, Majerus and Oberauer (2019) in a series of serial recall tasks using words as memory items, showed that immediate serial recall improved as the same words were consistently presented in the same positions, even though the word-to-word transitions were not repeated.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recently, Smalle, Muylle, Szmalec, and Duyck (2017) asked adults and 9-year-olds to rapidly recite sequences of novel monosyllabic word-forms including experiment-wide phonotactic constraints within a syllable (e.g., /t/ can only be an onset if the vowel is /i/) over a period of 4 days. Smalle et al (2017) focused on participants' speech errors that reflected these phonotactic constraints and found that adults demonstrated a learning effect for the phonotactic constraints on the second day consistent with adults' slowly emerging transfer effect in a variant of the Hebb paradigm (Nakayama & Saito, 2017). However, 9-year-olds had already started learning the constraints by the middle of the first day.…”
Section: Consistent Grouping and Transfer Effects Of Hebb Repetition mentioning
confidence: 93%
“…Learning in experimental settings at a laboratory. Thus far, only two studies have experimentally confirmed the effect of position-element association knowledge on verbal working memory (Nakayama & Saito, 2017;Majerus & Oberauer, 2019). In a series of experiments in Nakayama and Saito, participants performed trials (e.g., 704 trials in Experiment 1) of immediate serial recall of Japanese nonwords.…”
Section: The Effect Of Position-element Association Knowledgementioning
confidence: 99%