PHYSICAL INTERACTION AND ASSOCIATION BY CONTIGUITY IN MEMORY FOR THE WORDS AND MELODIES OF SONGS

被引:54
|
作者
CROWDER, RG [1 ]
SERAFINE, ML [1 ]
REPP, B [1 ]
机构
[1] HASKINS LABS INC,NEW HAVEN,CT 06511
关键词
D O I
10.3758/BF03198480
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Three experiments were designed to investigate two explanations for the integration effect in memory for songs (Serafine, Crowder, & Repp, 1984; Serafine, Davidson, Crowder, & Repp, 1986). The integration effect is the finding that recognition of the melody (or text) of a song is better in the presence of the text (or melody) with which it had been heard originally than in the presence of a different text (or melody). One explanation for this finding is the physical interaction hypothesis, which holds that one component of a song exerts subtle but memorable physical changes on the other component, making the latter different from what it would be with a different companion. In Experiments 1 and 2, we investigated the influence that words could exert on the subtle musical character of a melody. A second explanation for the integration effect is the association by-contiguity hypothesis, which holds that any two events experienced in close temporal proximity may become connected in memory such that each acts as a recall cue for the other. In Experiment 3, we investigated the degree to which simultaneous presentation of spoken text with a hummed melody would induce an association between the two components. The results gave encouragement for both explanations and are discussed in terms of the distinction between encoding specificity and independent associative bonding. © 1990 Psychonomic Society, Inc.
引用
收藏
页码:469 / 476
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] The songs of Colin Muset: words and melodies
    O'Sullivan, Daniel E.
    FRENCH REVIEW, 2007, 81 (02): : 375 - 376
  • [2] Contiguitas: The Pursuit of Physical Memory Contiguity in Datacenters
    Zhao, Kaiyang
    Xue, Kaiwen
    Wang, Ziqi
    Schatzberg, Dan
    Yang, Leon
    Manousis, Antonis
    Weiner, Johannes
    van Riel, Rik
    Sharma, Bikash
    Tang, Chunqiang
    Skarlatos, Dimitrios
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2023 THE 50TH ANNUAL INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON COMPUTER ARCHITECTURE, ISCA 2023, 2023, : 618 - 632
  • [3] Investigating cumulative disruptive interference in memory for melodies, words, and pictures
    Herff, Steffen A.
    Olsen, Kirk N.
    Anic, Aydin
    Schaal, Nora K.
    NEW IDEAS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2019, 55 : 68 - 77
  • [4] Memory for Japanese words of songs in everyday life
    Murakami, H
    Yonezawa, Y
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2000, 35 (3-4) : 450 - 451
  • [5] Contiguitas: The Pursuit of Physical Memory Contiguity in Data Centers
    Zhao, Kaiyang
    Xue, Kaiwen
    Wang, Ziqi
    Schatzberg, Dan
    Yang, Leon
    Manousis, Antonis
    Weiner, Johannes
    Riel, Rik Van
    Sharma, Bikash
    Tang, Chunqiang
    Skarlatos, Dimitrios
    IEEE MICRO, 2024, 44 (04) : 44 - 51
  • [6] Neural Substrates for Semantic Memory of Familiar Songs: Is There an Interface between Lyrics and Melodies?
    Saito, Yoko
    Ishii, Kenji
    Sakuma, Naoko
    Kawasaki, Keiichi
    Oda, Keiichi
    Mizusawa, Hidehiro
    PLOS ONE, 2012, 7 (09):
  • [7] Memory and metamemory for songs: the relative effectiveness of titles, lyrics, and melodies as cues for each other
    Peynircioglu, Zefira F.
    Rabinovitz, Brian E.
    Thompson, Jennifer L. W.
    PSYCHOLOGY OF MUSIC, 2008, 36 (01) : 47 - 61
  • [8] CHILDRENS MEMORY FOR NEW SONGS - INTEGRATION OR INDEPENDENT STORAGE OF WORDS AND TUNES
    MORRONGIELLO, BA
    ROES, CL
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL CHILD PSYCHOLOGY, 1990, 50 (01) : 25 - 38
  • [9] Study of odor memory - correlation with association words
    Oshida, A
    Hikichi, S
    CHEMICAL SENSES, 2006, 31 (01) : J24 - J25
  • [10] Lexical Association and False Memory for Words in Two Cultures
    Yuh-shiow Lee
    Wen-Chi Chiang
    Hsu-Ching Hung
    Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2008, 37 : 49 - 58