“…For example, in a case in which participants learn a list of paired associates by using a list of items they had previously learned in a serial recall task, an interitem associative mechanism predicts that the paired-associate list will be learned more rapidly because the interitem associations have already been learned (Young, 1968). However, the evidence for learned-associations transfer has been mixed, with some finding evidence against such transfer (e.g., Jensen, 1962;Young, 1962Young, , 1968) and others finding evidence in favor of transfer (e.g., Crowder, 1968;Mueller & Jablonski, 1973;Slamencka, 1977;Slamencka, Moore, & Carey, 1972).…”