2002
DOI: 10.1037/0278-7393.28.5.830
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Word frequency and receiver operating characteristic curves in recognition memory: Evidence for a dual-process interpretation.

Abstract: Dual-process models of the word-frequency mirror effect posit that low-frequency words are recollected more often than high-frequency words, producing the hit rate differences in the wordfrequency effect, whereas high-frequency words are more familiar, producing the false-alarm-rate differences. In this pair of experiments, the authors demonstrate that the analysis of receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves provides critical information in support of this interpretation. Specifically, when participants … Show more

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Cited by 53 publications
(91 citation statements)
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References 43 publications
(143 reference statements)
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“…One problem, however, is that the deviations do not appear to be random but tend to show a systematic pattern, in that the plots suggest nonlinearity. This is most evident for Arndt and Reder's (2002) data, shown in the bottom panels. For example, the black and gray circles in the left bottom panel show the LO and HO data, and it is apparent that the leftmost and rightmost circles are above the fitted line, whereas those in between are below the fitted line.…”
Section: Unequal Variance Sdt Modelmentioning
confidence: 72%
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“…One problem, however, is that the deviations do not appear to be random but tend to show a systematic pattern, in that the plots suggest nonlinearity. This is most evident for Arndt and Reder's (2002) data, shown in the bottom panels. For example, the black and gray circles in the left bottom panel show the LO and HO data, and it is apparent that the leftmost and rightmost circles are above the fitted line, whereas those in between are below the fitted line.…”
Section: Unequal Variance Sdt Modelmentioning
confidence: 72%
“…This is an important result that is consistent with the interpretation that the LN* distribution represents lowfrequency new words that are treated like LO words; a failure to find this result would cast doubt on the "false recognition" interpretation offered here. The mixing proportions in Table 4 show that the proportion of LN* words was about 30% in Experiment 1a, 34% in Experiment 1b, and 4% in Arndt and Reder's (2002) Experiment 2, and so there was less mixing for low-frequency new words in Arndt and Reder's study; this might be due to differences in the lowfrequency words used across the studies. A reviewer asked whether the LN* distribution can simply be restricted to have the same location as the LO distribution, as the LN* words are viewed as being low-frequency new words that are treated like LO words.…”
Section: Mixture Sdt Modelsmentioning
confidence: 85%
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