“…This finding is attributable to a combination of two established effects in the memory for language literature. Generating labels for items, rather than reading or hearing them, creates a memory benefit known as the generation effect (Bertsch et al, 2007; Dew & Mulligan, 2008; Slamecka & Graf, 1978; Zormpa, Brehm, et al, 2019; Zormpa, Meyer, et al, 2019), while producing words aloud, rather than saying them silently, creates a memory benefit known as the production effect (MacLeod et al, 2010; Ozubko et al, 2014; Zormpa, Brehm, et al, 2019). In the elicited conversations in Experiment 3, individuals had to generate as well as produce their responses, enhancing memory due to both effects.…”