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Remembering, Knowing and the Tulving-Wiseman Law

Sikström, Sverker P. LU orcid and Gardiner, John M. (1997) In European Journal of Cognitive Psychology 9(2). p.167-185
Abstract

The Tulving-Wiseman law is an empirical law that describes the relation between successive tests of recognition and recall of the same set of individual subject-items. It relates the probability of recognising the recallable items to the probability of recognising all the items, regardless of whether they are recalled. The relation represents a moderate degree of dependency between the tests. Two experiments are described in which subjects reported, in each of the two tests, whether they consciously remembered the item's occurrence in the study list, or they knew it occurred in the study list because it was familiar in the experimental context. Analyses of the relation between recognition and recall within each reported state of... (More)

The Tulving-Wiseman law is an empirical law that describes the relation between successive tests of recognition and recall of the same set of individual subject-items. It relates the probability of recognising the recallable items to the probability of recognising all the items, regardless of whether they are recalled. The relation represents a moderate degree of dependency between the tests. Two experiments are described in which subjects reported, in each of the two tests, whether they consciously remembered the item's occurrence in the study list, or they knew it occurred in the study list because it was familiar in the experimental context. Analyses of the relation between recognition and recall within each reported state of awareness revealed a much greater dependency for remember responses, and less dependency for know responses, than that predicted by the Tulving-Wiseman law. These findings are discussed in relation to memory systems theory and contextual accounts of recognition failure.

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author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
European Journal of Cognitive Psychology
volume
9
issue
2
pages
19 pages
publisher
Psychology Press
external identifiers
  • scopus:0038331865
ISSN
0954-1446
DOI
10.1080/713752554
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
477aad52-6a2a-4e87-a6e6-a4df667f40f1
date added to LUP
2021-11-04 14:25:50
date last changed
2022-02-02 01:05:47
@article{477aad52-6a2a-4e87-a6e6-a4df667f40f1,
  abstract     = {{<p>The Tulving-Wiseman law is an empirical law that describes the relation between successive tests of recognition and recall of the same set of individual subject-items. It relates the probability of recognising the recallable items to the probability of recognising all the items, regardless of whether they are recalled. The relation represents a moderate degree of dependency between the tests. Two experiments are described in which subjects reported, in each of the two tests, whether they consciously remembered the item's occurrence in the study list, or they knew it occurred in the study list because it was familiar in the experimental context. Analyses of the relation between recognition and recall within each reported state of awareness revealed a much greater dependency for remember responses, and less dependency for know responses, than that predicted by the Tulving-Wiseman law. These findings are discussed in relation to memory systems theory and contextual accounts of recognition failure.</p>}},
  author       = {{Sikström, Sverker P. and Gardiner, John M.}},
  issn         = {{0954-1446}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{2}},
  pages        = {{167--185}},
  publisher    = {{Psychology Press}},
  series       = {{European Journal of Cognitive Psychology}},
  title        = {{Remembering, Knowing and the Tulving-Wiseman Law}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/713752554}},
  doi          = {{10.1080/713752554}},
  volume       = {{9}},
  year         = {{1997}},
}