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Article

Gone but Not Forgotten: The Transient Nature of Retrieval-Induced Forgetting

Details

Citation

MacLeod M & Macrae CN (2001) Gone but Not Forgotten: The Transient Nature of Retrieval-Induced Forgetting. Psychological Science, 12 (2), pp. 148-152. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9280.00325

Abstract
Recent research has demonstrated that the act of remembering can prompt temporary forgetting or, more specifically, the inhibition of particular items in memory. Extending work of this kind, the present research investigated some possible boundary conditions of retrieval-induced forgetting. As expected, a critical determinant of temporary forgetting was the interval between guided retrieval practice and a final recall test. When these two phases were separated by 24 hr, retrieval-induced forgetting failed to emerge. When they occurred in the same testing session, however, retrieval practice prompted the inhibition of related items in memory (i.e., Experiment 1). A delay of 24 hr between the encoding of material and guided retrieval practice reduced but did not eliminate retrieval-induced forgetting (i.e., Experiment 2). These findings are considered in the wider context of adaptive forgetting.

Journal
Psychological Science: Volume 12, Issue 2

StatusPublished
Publication date31/03/2001
PublisherSAGE
ISSN0956-7976
eISSN1467-9280

People (1)

Professor Malcolm MacLeod

Professor Malcolm MacLeod

Professor, Psychology