“…Studies indicate that it is easier to recall information that is visual (Paivio and Csapo, 1973 ), concrete (Butter, 1970 ; Sheehan and Antrobus, 1972 ), repeated (Kintsch et al, 1975 ), specific (Mani and Johnson-Laird, 1982 ), personal (Van Lancker, 1991 ), novel (Kishiyama and Yonelinas, 2003 ), typical (Reeve and Aggleton, 1998 ), humorous (Schmidt, 1994 ; Summerfelt et al, 2010 ; Carlson, 2011 ) and self-generated (Wheeler and Gabbert, 2017 ). The likelihood a retrieval cue leads to recollection depends on the similarity between the features encoded initially and those provided by the retrieval cue, distinguishability from other cues, and association with the newly learned information (Wheeler and Gabbert, 2017 ). Storing information to memory seems to depend on deep processing of the meaning of new material, determined by the degree to which one understands the information to form meaningful associations and elaborations with existing knowledge (Bower, 2000 ), as well as on arousal (Butter, 1970 ) and individual differences (Verhaeghen and Marcoen, 1996 ) [e.g., age (Anderson et al, 2000 ), mood (Bower et al, 1978 )].…”