Psychological Monographs, Vol. 25 (Classic Reprint) - Hardcover

James Rowland Angell

 
9780331432503: Psychological Monographs, Vol. 25 (Classic Reprint)

Synopsis

Memory under pressure: how the timing of effort after learning shapes recall

This nonfiction work surveys experiments on retroactive inhibition, showing how what you do after learning can boost or dampen memory for the material just learned. It weaves together past studies and new findings to explain when an after‑learning activity helps or hinders retention.

Two short paragraphs:
  • It reviews earlier work by researchers like Müller, Pilzecker, Heine, and De Camp, and explains the methods used to test memory after learning. The report compares conditions that enforce mental work with those that leave the interval free, and it summarizes the results across multiple experiments.
  • It then presents a set of experiments using the Savings method and Right Associates, highlighting how different post‑learning activities can produce varying levels of retroactive inhibition. The discussion emphasizes how interpretation can depend on the learning task and test type.
  • Learn how researchers set up learning tasks, the kinds of post‑learning activities used, and how inhibition was measured.
  • See how recognition memory differed from recall in showing inhibitory effects.
  • Understand how stronger versus weaker associations fared under retroactive inhibition, and what this means for learning strategies.
Ideal for readers of psychology history and method, and for anyone curious about how experimental design shapes memory results.

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