Absence of size congruency effects in amnesic patients' recognition: A failure of perceptually based recollection. |
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Authors: | Verfaellie, Mieke Cook, Shaun P. Keane, Margaret M. |
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Abstract: | This study examined the status of recollection in amnesia when recollection is supported by perceptual rather than conceptual processes. Two experiments investigated the size congruency effect--the advantage in recognition of patterns presented in the same size, rather than in different sizes--at study and test. In Experiment 1, the authors used a remember-know paradigm in nonamnesic individuals and demonstrated that the size congruency effect was due to enhanced recollection. In Experiment 2, the authors examined whether amnesic patients would show a size congruency effect when their overall level of performance was matched to that of controls. Amnesic patients failed to show a size congruency effect. These findings provide evidence for a disproportionate disruption in recollection compared with familiarity in amnesia, even when recollection is supported by perceptual processes. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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Keywords: | size congruency congruency effect amnesic patients perceptual processes conceptual processes recognition |
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