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Source Memory (source + memory)
Selected AbstractsSource memory for the color of pictures: Event-related brain potentials (ERPs) reveal sensory-specific retrieval-related activityPSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, Issue 3 2003Yael M. Cycowicz Abstract Remembering the context (i.e., source) in which an event occurred reveals episodic memory effects (EM) in the event-related brain potentials (ERP). In some verbal source memory experiments, a late prefrontal EM effect has been observed. In a different, pictorial source memory paradigm, a late, parieto-occipital EM effect was recorded. To assess whether these two EM effects stemmed from differences in task paradigms or from source-attribute differences, ERPs were recorded during source memory retrieval for object colors in two tasks. In the sequential task, old/new judgments were followed by source judgments (i.e., color). In the exclusion task, source memory judgments coincided with recognition judgments. For both tasks, late, parietao-occipital EM effects were observed. These findings suggest that it is not the nature of the task, but rather the perceptual characteristics of the source that lead to the presence of the parieto-occipital EM effect. The data further imply that memories for perceptual attributes such as color are stored in and retrieved from sensory-specific cortical areas. [source] Memory for drawings in locations: Spatial source memory and event-related potentialsPSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, Issue 4 2000Cyma van Petten Event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded during recognition tasks for line drawings (items) or for both drawings and their spatial locations (sources). Recognized drawings elicited more positive ERPs than new drawings. Independent of accuracy in the spatial judgment, the old/new effect in the source recognition task was larger over the prefrontal scalp, and of longer temporal duration than in the item recognition task, suggesting that the source memory task engaged a qualitatively distinct memory process. More posterior scalp sites were sensitive to the accuracy of the source judgment, but this effect was delayed relative to the difference between studied and unstudied drawings, suggesting that source memory processes are completed after item recognition. Similarities and differences between spatial source memory and memory for conjunctions of other stimulus attributes are discussed, together with the role of prefrontal cortex in memory. [source] Effects of pre-trial publicity and jury deliberation on juror bias and source memory errorsAPPLIED COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY, Issue 1 2007Christine Ruva We examined the effects of exposure to pre-trial publicity (PTP) and jury deliberation on juror memory and decision making. Mock jurors either read news articles containing negative PTP or articles unrelated to the trial. They later viewed a videotaped murder trial, after which they either made collaborative group decisions about guilt or individual decisions. Finally, all participants independently attributed specific information as having been presented during the trial or in the news articles. Exposure to PTP significantly affected guilty verdicts, sentence length, perceptions of defendant credibility, and misattributions of PTP as having been presented as trial evidence. Jury deliberation had significant effects on jury verdicts, perceptions of defendant credibility, source memory for trial items, and confidence in source memory judgements, but did not affect sentences or critical source memory errors. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] |