“…Since the earliest demonstrations of the suffix effect, it has been widely investigated (e.g., Baddeley & Hull, 1979;Balota & Engle, 1981;Beaman & Morton, 2000;Crowder & Morton, 1969;Greene, 1992;Greene & Crowder, 1988;Nicholls & Jones, 2002;Penney, 1985). Contemporary studies have shown that not only is marked recency not confined to the auditory verbal domain, it is also observed with visuoverbal material such as lipread lists (Campbell & Dodd, 1982;Divin, Coyle, & James, 2001;Gathercole, 1987) and, significantly, with visual nonverbal material, such as the position of objects in twodimensional space (e.g., Avons, 1998;Jones, Farrand, Stuart, & Morris, 1995), or even with auditory spatial stimuli (Parmentier & Jones, 2000).…”