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Linear Forgetting

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posted on 2017-11-27, 00:00 authored by Jerry Scott Fisher

The aim of this thesis was to explore a long-term memory retention function that deviates from the typical Ebbinghaus pattern of a sharp initial decrease that slows at a negatively accelerated rate. This pattern, commonly fit to a power function, has been observed across a variety of stimuli, tasks, and retention lengths. However, a recent study by Radvansky, O’Rear, and Fisher (2017) has revealed a retention function for event-based sentences that shows little forgetting through the first week before dropping quickly. This thesis tested the robustness of this pattern under a similar design and over an extended retention period of eight weeks. Results revealed a retention pattern that fell at a consistent linear rate across time. The possibility that this is due to a standard forgetting process involving multiple event components, partial matching or reconstruction at retrieval, and the passage of time is discussed, along with proposals for further studies.

History

Date Created

2017-11-27

Date Modified

2018-10-03

Defense Date

2017-11-27

Research Director(s)

Gabriel A. Radvansky

Committee Members

Nathan Rose Bradley S. Gibson

Degree

  • Master of Arts

Degree Level

  • Master's Thesis

Program Name

  • Psychology

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