Depressive symptomatology and learning: Does intermediate testing or restudying the information determine long-term memory retrieval of novel symbols? - 13/04/16
Résumé |
Introduction |
There is a hypothesis in cognitive psychology that long-term memory retrieval is improved by intermediate testing than by restudying the information. The effect of testing has been investigated with the use of a variety of stimuli. However, almost all testing effect studies to date have used purely verbal materials such as word pairs, facts and prose passages.
Objective |
Here byzantine music symbol–word pairs were used as to-be-learned materials to demonstrate the generalisability of the testing effect to symbol learning in participants with and without depressive symptoms.
Method |
Fifty healthy (24 women, M age=26.20, SD=5.64) and forty volunteers with high depressive symptomatology (20 women, M age=27.00, SD=1.04) were examined. The participants did not have a music education. The examination material was completely new for them: 16 byzantine music notation stimuli, paired with a verbal label (the ancient Greek name of the symbol). Half of the participants underwent intermediate testing and the others restudied the information in a balanced design.
Results |
Results indicated that there were no statistically significant differences in final memory test performance after a retention interval of 5minutes for both groups of participants with low and high level depressive symptomatology (P>0.005). After a retention interval of a week, tested pairs were retained better than repeatedly studied pairs for high and low depressive symptomatology groups (P<0.005).
Conclusions |
This research suggests that the effect of testing time on later memory retrieval can also be obtained in byzantine symbol learning.
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Vol 33 - N° S
P. S412 - mars 2016 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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