“…Alternatively, the presence of prior knowledge has been argued to facilitate recollection and detailed recall, either by acting as a scaffold to support the encoding and recall of contextspecific details (Brandt, Cooper, & Dewhurst, 2005;Chase & Simon, 1973;Chase & Ericsson, 1981, 1982Ghosh & Gilboa, 2014;Rawson & Van Overschelde, 2008;Robin & Moscovitch, 2014; Van Overschelde, Rawson, Dunlosky, & Hunt, 2005), or by increasing the efficiency of encoding processes (Chase & Simon, 1973;Jackson & Raymond, 2008;Lupyan, Rakison, & McClelland, 2007). Many recent behavioural experiments support a positive relationship between prior knowledge and recollection using a Remember-Know procedure, indicating that prior knowledge, at the very least, facilitates subjective experience of recalling a study episode in more detail (Brandt, Cooper, & Dewhurst, 2005;Horry, Wright, & Tredoux, 2010;Long, Prat, Johns, Morris, & Jonathan, 2008;Long & Prat, 2002;Reder et al, 2013).…”