Memorabeatlia: a naturalistic study of long-term memory.


Autoria(s): Hyman, IE; Rubin, DC
Data(s)

01/03/1990

Formato

205 - 214

Identificador

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2319962

Mem Cognit, 1990, 18 (2), pp. 205 - 214

0090-502X

http://hdl.handle.net/10161/10162

Relação

Mem Cognit

10.3758/BF03197096

Tipo

Journal Article

Cobertura

United States

Resumo

Seventy-six undergraduates were given the titles and first lines of Beatles' songs and asked to recall the songs. Seven hundred and four different undergraduates were cued with one line from each of 25 Beatles' songs and asked to recall the title. The probability of recalling a line was best predicted by the number of times a line was repeated in the song and how early the line first appeared in the song. The probability of cuing to the title was best predicted by whether the line shared words with the title. Although the subjects recalled only 21% of the lines, there were very few errors in recall, and the errors rarely violated the rhythmic, poetic, or thematic constraints of the songs. Acting together, these constraints can account for the near verbatim recall observed. Fourteen subjects, who transcribed one song, made fewer and different errors than the subjects who had recalled the song, indicating that the errors in recall were not primarily the result of errors in encoding.

Idioma(s)

ENG

Palavras-Chave #Adult #Attention #Cues #Humans #Memory #Mental Recall #Music #Retention (Psychology) #Verbal Learning