1996
DOI: 10.1006/jmla.1996.0013
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The Misremembrance of Wines Past: Verbal and Perceptual Expertise Differentially Mediate Verbal Overshadowing of Taste Memory

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Cited by 249 publications
(241 citation statements)
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“…If this effect was sensitive to the asymmetry between procedural and verbal skill, as in verbal overshadowing (cf. Melcher & Schooler, 1996), the higher skill golfers should be more disrupted by verbalization. Indeed, the lower skill group might benefit from verbalization, as suggested by work on skill-focused attention .…”
Section: The Present Experimentsmentioning
confidence: 98%
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“…If this effect was sensitive to the asymmetry between procedural and verbal skill, as in verbal overshadowing (cf. Melcher & Schooler, 1996), the higher skill golfers should be more disrupted by verbalization. Indeed, the lower skill group might benefit from verbalization, as suggested by work on skill-focused attention .…”
Section: The Present Experimentsmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Disruption occurs only when individuals attempt to describe memory for a stimulus with indescribable qualities. Verbal overshadowing has been observed in such domains as taste (Melcher & Schooler, 1996), audition (Houser, Fiore, & Schooler, 2003), map memory (Fiore & Schooler, 2002), and insight problem solving (Schooler et al, 1993), establishing that the effect is not limited to visual memories per se.…”
Section: The Present Experimentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Thus, when two odors have been mixed together, the two components become harder to tell apart. Fourth, a considerable body of evidence suggests that olfactory perceptual experts, particularly wine tasters, are better at discriminating between wines even in the absence of the linguistic skills associated with formal wine training [22,23] (Fig. 1a).…”
Section: Memory and Olfactory Perceptionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This phenomenon has broadly been termed 'verbal overshadowing' and has been found to apply to memory for faces and colours (Schooler & Engstler-Schooler, 1990), maps (Fiore & Schooler, 2002), mushrooms (Melcher & Schooler, 2004), voices (e.g. Perfect, Hunt & Harris, 2002), wines (Melcher & Schooler, 1996), analogies (Lane & Schooler, 2004) and visual imagery (e.g. Brandimonte, Schooler & Gabbino, 1997).…”
Section: When Do Words Hurt? a Multi-process View Of The Effects Of Vmentioning
confidence: 99%