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Original Articles

Testing the associative-link hypothesis in immediate serial recall: Evidence from word frequency and word imageability effects

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Pages 675-690 | Received 01 Dec 2006, Published online: 18 Jul 2007

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

Read on this site (3)

Jean Saint-Aubin, Katherine Guérard, Cindy Chamberland & Amélie Malenfant. (2014) Delineating the contribution of long-term associations to immediate recall. Memory 22:4, pages 360-373.
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Pascale Larigauderie, Aurelie Michaud & Siobhan Vicente. (2011) The role of semantic memory in short-term recall: Effect of strategic retrieval ability in an elderly population. Aging, Neuropsychology, and Cognition 18:2, pages 147-179.
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Articles from other publishers (21)

Chi‐Shing Tse & Jeanette Altarriba. (2022) Independent effects of word concreteness and word valence on immediate serial recall. British Journal of Psychology 113:3, pages 820-834.
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Zubaida Shebani, Peter J. Nestor & Friedemann Pulvermüller. (2021) What’s “up”? Impaired Spatial Preposition Processing in Posterior Cortical Atrophy. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 15.
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Angela M. AuBuchon, William G. Kronenberger, Lindsay Stone & David B. Pisoni. (2020) Strategy Use on Clinical Administrations of Short-Term and Working Memory Tasks. Journal of Psychoeducational Assessment 38:8, pages 954-968.
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Matthew H. C. Mak & Hope Twitchell. (2020) Evidence for preferential attachment: Words that are more well connected in semantic networks are better at acquiring new links in paired-associate learning. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review 27:5, pages 1059-1069.
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Benjamin Kowialiewski & Steve Majerus. (2019) Verbal working memory and linguistic long-term memory: Exploring the lexical cohort effect. Memory & Cognition 47:5, pages 997-1011.
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Etienne Lefebvre & Amedeo D’Angiulli. (2019) Imagery-Mediated Verbal Learning Depends on Vividness–Familiarity Interactions: The Possible Role of Dualistic Resting State Network Activity Interference. Brain Sciences 9:6, pages 143.
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Benjamin Kowialiewski & Steve Majerus. (2018) The non-strategic nature of linguistic long-term memory effects in verbal short-term memory. Journal of Memory and Language 101, pages 64-83.
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Nicola Savill, Rachel Ellis, Emma Brooke, Tiffany Koa, Suzie Ferguson, Elena Rojas-Rodriguez, Dominic Arnold, Jonathan Smallwood & Elizabeth Jefferies. (2017) Keeping it together: Semantic coherence stabilizes phonological sequences in short-term memory. Memory & Cognition 46:3, pages 426-437.
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Gregory L. Wade & Timothy J. Vickery. (2017) Self-relevance effects and label choice: Strong variations in label-matching performance due to non-self-relevant factors. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics 79:5, pages 1524-1534.
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Pascale Larigauderie, Marie Lange, Aline Dutheil, Charlotte Cérémonie, Siobhan Vicente & Manuel Gimenes. (2016) Contribution de capacités exécutives et non exécutives dans différentes situations de rappel à court terme : étude chez la personne âgée. L’Année psychologique 116:03, pages 351-389.
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Shogo Kajimura & Michio Nomura. (2016) When we cannot speak: Eye contact disrupts resources available to cognitive control processes during verb generation. Cognition 157, pages 352-357.
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Pascale Larigauderie, Marie Lange, Aline Dutheil, Charlotte Cérémonie, Siobhan Vicente & Manuel Gimenes. (2016) Contribution de capacités exécutives et non exécutives dans différentes situations de rappel à court terme : étude chez la personne âgée. L’Année psychologique Vol. 116:3, pages 351-389.
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Nicola Savill, Tim Metcalfe, Andrew W. Ellis & Elizabeth Jefferies. (2015) Semantic categorisation of a word supports its phonological integrity in verbal short-term memory. Journal of Memory and Language 84, pages 128-138.
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Yanli Huang & Chi-Shing Tse. (2015) Re-Examining the Automaticity and Directionality of the Activation of the Spatial-Valence "Good is Up" Metaphoric Association. PLOS ONE 10:4, pages e0123371.
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Siri-Maria Kamp, Ty Brumback & Emanuel Donchin. (2013) The component structure of ERP subsequent memory effects in the Von Restorff paradigm and the word frequency effect in recall. Psychophysiology 50:11, pages 1079-1093.
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Paul F. Hill & Lisa J. Emery. (2013) Episodic future thought: Contributions from working memory. Consciousness and Cognition 22:3, pages 677-683.
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Jennifer L. Gianico-Relyea & Jeanette Altarriba. (2017) Word Concreteness as a Moderator of the Tip-of-The-Tongue Effect. The Psychological Record 62:4, pages 763-776.
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Hannah R. Snyder, Marie T. Banich & Yuko Munakata. (2011) Choosing Our Words: Retrieval and Selection Processes Recruit Shared Neural Substrates in Left Ventrolateral Prefrontal Cortex. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 23:11, pages 3470-3482.
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Leonie M. Miller & Steven Roodenrys. (2009) The interaction of word frequency and concreteness in immediate serial recall. Memory & Cognition 37:6, pages 850-865.
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Chi‐Shing Tse & Jeanette Altarriba. (2010) Retracted: The word concreteness effect occurs for positive, but not negative, emotion words in immediate serial recall . British Journal of Psychology 100:1, pages 91-109.
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Hannah R. Snyder & Yuko Munakata. (2008) So many options, so little time: The roles of association and competition in underdetermined responding. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review 15:6, pages 1083-1088.
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