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Testing Hypotheses About Binding in Context Memory With a Hierarchical Multinomial Modeling Approach: A Preregistered Study

Abstract. In experiments on multidimensional source memory, a stochastic dependency of source memory for different facets of an episode has been repeatedly demonstrated. This may suggest an integrated representation leading to mutual cuing in context retrieval. However, experiments involving a manip...

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Autores principales: Arnold, Nina R., Heck, Daniel W., Bröder, Arndt, Meiser, Thorsten, Boywitt, C. Dennis
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hogrefe Publishing 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7037831/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31096874
http://dx.doi.org/10.1027/1618-3169/a000442
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author Arnold, Nina R.
Heck, Daniel W.
Bröder, Arndt
Meiser, Thorsten
Boywitt, C. Dennis
author_facet Arnold, Nina R.
Heck, Daniel W.
Bröder, Arndt
Meiser, Thorsten
Boywitt, C. Dennis
author_sort Arnold, Nina R.
collection PubMed
description Abstract. In experiments on multidimensional source memory, a stochastic dependency of source memory for different facets of an episode has been repeatedly demonstrated. This may suggest an integrated representation leading to mutual cuing in context retrieval. However, experiments involving a manipulated reinstatement of one source feature have often failed to affect retrieval of the other feature, suggesting unbound features or rather item-feature binding. The stochastic dependency found in former studies might be a spurious correlation due to aggregation across participants varying in memory strength. We test this artifact explanation by applying a hierarchical multinomial model. Observing stochastic dependency when accounting for interindividual differences would rule out the artifact explanation. A second goal is to elucidate the nature of feature binding: Contrasting encoding conditions with integrated feature judgments versus separate feature judgments are expected to induce different levels of stochastic dependency despite comparable overall source memory if integrated representations include feature-feature binding. The experiment replicated the finding of stochastic dependency and, thus, ruled out an artifact interpretation. However, we did not find different levels of stochastic dependency between conditions. Therefore, the current findings do not reveal decisive evidence to distinguish between the feature-feature binding and the item-context binding account.
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spelling pubmed-70378312020-02-24 Testing Hypotheses About Binding in Context Memory With a Hierarchical Multinomial Modeling Approach: A Preregistered Study Arnold, Nina R. Heck, Daniel W. Bröder, Arndt Meiser, Thorsten Boywitt, C. Dennis Exp Psychol Registered Report Abstract. In experiments on multidimensional source memory, a stochastic dependency of source memory for different facets of an episode has been repeatedly demonstrated. This may suggest an integrated representation leading to mutual cuing in context retrieval. However, experiments involving a manipulated reinstatement of one source feature have often failed to affect retrieval of the other feature, suggesting unbound features or rather item-feature binding. The stochastic dependency found in former studies might be a spurious correlation due to aggregation across participants varying in memory strength. We test this artifact explanation by applying a hierarchical multinomial model. Observing stochastic dependency when accounting for interindividual differences would rule out the artifact explanation. A second goal is to elucidate the nature of feature binding: Contrasting encoding conditions with integrated feature judgments versus separate feature judgments are expected to induce different levels of stochastic dependency despite comparable overall source memory if integrated representations include feature-feature binding. The experiment replicated the finding of stochastic dependency and, thus, ruled out an artifact interpretation. However, we did not find different levels of stochastic dependency between conditions. Therefore, the current findings do not reveal decisive evidence to distinguish between the feature-feature binding and the item-context binding account. Hogrefe Publishing 2019-05-17 2019 /pmc/articles/PMC7037831/ /pubmed/31096874 http://dx.doi.org/10.1027/1618-3169/a000442 Text en © 2019 Distributed under the Hogrefe OpenMind License http://doi.org/10.1027/a000001
spellingShingle Registered Report
Arnold, Nina R.
Heck, Daniel W.
Bröder, Arndt
Meiser, Thorsten
Boywitt, C. Dennis
Testing Hypotheses About Binding in Context Memory With a Hierarchical Multinomial Modeling Approach: A Preregistered Study
title Testing Hypotheses About Binding in Context Memory With a Hierarchical Multinomial Modeling Approach: A Preregistered Study
title_full Testing Hypotheses About Binding in Context Memory With a Hierarchical Multinomial Modeling Approach: A Preregistered Study
title_fullStr Testing Hypotheses About Binding in Context Memory With a Hierarchical Multinomial Modeling Approach: A Preregistered Study
title_full_unstemmed Testing Hypotheses About Binding in Context Memory With a Hierarchical Multinomial Modeling Approach: A Preregistered Study
title_short Testing Hypotheses About Binding in Context Memory With a Hierarchical Multinomial Modeling Approach: A Preregistered Study
title_sort testing hypotheses about binding in context memory with a hierarchical multinomial modeling approach: a preregistered study
topic Registered Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7037831/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31096874
http://dx.doi.org/10.1027/1618-3169/a000442
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