Describe the serial position effect in retrieval of information from memory.
Contrast the primacy effect and the recency effect in memory recall.
Contrast the serial position effect on an immediate recall task and a delayed recall task.
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1. What do we do when we need to remember a phone number, a grocery list, directions to a house, or the names of people we meet at a party? When we try to memorize a list of items, we usually rehearse the items, repeating the list silently to maintain it in short-term memory (STM), or actively process the information in order to encode it for relatively permanent storage in our long-term memory (LTM). When we need the information, we retrieve it from LTM and move it back into STM so it can be used.
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2. When the time comes to retrieve the information from memory, the serial position effect predicts that we will be more likely to recall the last and first items in the list. The middle items are the ones most vulnerable to forgetting.
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3. The serial position effect is actually two separate effects. When you are introduced to a group of people, the last few names you hear will probably be remembered the best (the recency effect).
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4. The first few names are also highly likely to be remembered (the primacy effect).
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5. The names in the middle are the most likely to be forgotten.
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6. When there is a time delay between meeting the people and recalling their names, the primacy effect remains, but the recency effect diminishes.
Practice 1: Demonstrating the Serial Position Effect
Select the BEGIN MEMORY TEST button to begin the memory test.
When information is presented in a list, some items are easier to remember than others. Can you predict which items people are more likely to remember? In a moment, we will show you a list of 16 words, one at a time. Do not write them down. Rely entirely on your memory to recall as many as you possibly can.
Type all the words you can recall, in any order. Put one space between words. You must spell each word exactly as it was presented. When you have typed all the words you can remember, select the FINISHED button.
You recalled | Number correct |
---|---|
word words words words |
100 |
Actual word list | Percent correct | |
---|---|---|
First 4 words | words words words words | 100% |
Middle 8 words | words words words words words words words words | 100% |
Last 4 words | words words words words | 100% |
Words in bold were correctly recalled |
Practice 2: Explaining the Serial Position Effect
Select each button to view an explanation of that portion of the serial position effect.
When recalling a list of words, most people perform better at recalling the first and last words in the list than the words in the middle. The tendency to remember early words in the list is called the primacy effect. The tendency to remember the last few words in the list, especially when the recall test occurs immediately after viewing the list, is called the recency effect.
The overall tendency to best recall the last and first items in a list is known as the serial position effect.
The primacy effect occurs because people are able to rehearse the first few words several times before the number of list items overwhelms their short-term memory capacity. The rehearsal enables people to encode these words more fully than words arriving later in the list.
Once people get to the middle of the list, their short-term memory doesn’t have enough capacity to rehearse the initial words AND pay attention to the new words at the same time. The middle words don’t get much rehearsal, so they fade away quickly.
The recency effect occurs on an immediate recall task because the last few words are still in short-term memory when people are asked to recall the list. If you are like most people, one of the first words you typed came from the end of the list. On a delayed recall task, the recency effect disappears, because those words do not receive as much rehearsal as the first words.
Quiz 1
Match the terms to their descriptions by dragging each colored circle to the appropriate gray circle. When all the colored circles have been placed, select the CHECK ANSWER button.
Quiz 2
Drag each label to the gray area connected to the appropriate portion of the graph. When all the labels have been placed, select the CHECK ANSWER button.