PMID: 15376811Sep 21, 2004Paper

ROC curves show that the revelation effect is not a single phenomenon

Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
Michael F Verde, Caren M Rotello

Abstract

The revelation effect describes the increased tendency to call items old when a recognition judgment is preceded by an incidental task. In theory, the effect could come about either from a more liberal response bias or from a change in underlying memory sensitivity. Using analyses of receiver-operating characteristic curves, we show that the revelation effect occurs for each of these reasons, but under different empirical conditions. A shift in response bias fully accounts for the revelation effect when revealed items are unrelated to the subsequent recognition probes. However, a change in memory sensitivity contributes to the effect when revealed items are identical to the recognition probes. Thus, the revelation effect encompasses at least two distinct phenomena.

References

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Citations

Dec 21, 2011·The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology : QJEP·John R Vokey, William E Hockley
Jan 31, 2008·Psychonomic Bulletin & Review·Jennifer C Major, Wuliam E Hockley
Aug 3, 2004·Memory & Cognition·Daniel M BernsteinElizabeth F Loftus
Mar 1, 2005·Psychonomic Bulletin & Review·Nazanin Azimian-Faridani, Edward L Wilding
May 20, 2009·Psychonomic Bulletin & Review·Daniel M BernsteinElizabeth F Loftus
Oct 10, 2009·Psychonomic Bulletin & Review·Kymberly D YoungTimothy J Hohman
Jun 14, 2005·Consciousness and Cognition·P Andrew LeynesRichard J Addante
Apr 17, 2015·Consciousness and Cognition·André Aßfalg, Lena Nadarevic
Sep 1, 2016·Consciousness and Cognition·Hiroshi Miura, Yuji Itoh
Dec 10, 2016·PloS One·Angharad N WilliamsEdward L Wilding
Dec 29, 2016·Memory & Cognition·André AßfalgDaniel M Bernstein
Feb 6, 2017·Psychonomic Bulletin & Review·André AßfalgWilliam Hockley
May 6, 2017·Memory & Cognition·Deanne L WestermanMarianne E Lloyd
Sep 25, 2021·Memory & Cognition·Kaitlyn M Fallow, D Stephen Lindsay

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