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Papers by Martin Karlin

Research paper thumbnail of Depth of processing pictures of faces and recognition memory

Journal of experimental psychology, Oct 1, 1974

Research paper thumbnail of Semantic category effects in visual word search

Attention Perception & Psychophysics, Sep 1, 1976

Research paper thumbnail of Comprehension and memory for pictures

The thesis advanced is that people remember nonsensical pictures much better if they comprehend w... more The thesis advanced is that people remember nonsensical pictures much better if they comprehend what they are about. Two experiments supported this thesis. In the first, nonsensical "droodles" were studied by subjects with or without an accompanying verbal interpretation of the pictures. Free recall was much better for subjects receiving the interpretation during study. Also, a later recognition test showed that subjects receiving the interpretation rated as more similar to the original picture a distractor which was close to the prototype of the interpreted category. In Experiment II, subjects studied pairs of nonsensical pictures, with or without a linking interpretation provided, Subjects who heard a phrase identifying and interrelating the pictures of a pair showed greater associative recall and matching than subjects who received no interpretation. The results suggest that memory is aided whenever contextual cues arouse appropriate schemata into which the material to be learned can be fitted,

Research paper thumbnail of Semantic category effects in visual word search

Perception & Psychophysics, 1976

Research paper thumbnail of Depth of processing pictures of faces and recognition memory

Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1974

Research paper thumbnail of Comprehension and memory for pictures

Memory & Cognition, 1975

The thesis advanced is that people remember nonsensical pictures much better if they comprehend w... more The thesis advanced is that people remember nonsensical pictures much better if they comprehend what they are about. Two experiments supported this thesis. In the first, nonsensical “droodles” were studied by subjects with or without an accompanying verbal interpretation of the pictures. Free recall was much better for subjects receiving the interpretation during study. Also, a later recognition test showed

Research paper thumbnail of Depth of processing pictures of faces and recognition memory

Journal of experimental psychology, Oct 1, 1974

Research paper thumbnail of Semantic category effects in visual word search

Attention Perception & Psychophysics, Sep 1, 1976

Research paper thumbnail of Comprehension and memory for pictures

The thesis advanced is that people remember nonsensical pictures much better if they comprehend w... more The thesis advanced is that people remember nonsensical pictures much better if they comprehend what they are about. Two experiments supported this thesis. In the first, nonsensical "droodles" were studied by subjects with or without an accompanying verbal interpretation of the pictures. Free recall was much better for subjects receiving the interpretation during study. Also, a later recognition test showed that subjects receiving the interpretation rated as more similar to the original picture a distractor which was close to the prototype of the interpreted category. In Experiment II, subjects studied pairs of nonsensical pictures, with or without a linking interpretation provided, Subjects who heard a phrase identifying and interrelating the pictures of a pair showed greater associative recall and matching than subjects who received no interpretation. The results suggest that memory is aided whenever contextual cues arouse appropriate schemata into which the material to be learned can be fitted,

Research paper thumbnail of Semantic category effects in visual word search

Perception & Psychophysics, 1976

Research paper thumbnail of Depth of processing pictures of faces and recognition memory

Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1974

Research paper thumbnail of Comprehension and memory for pictures

Memory & Cognition, 1975

The thesis advanced is that people remember nonsensical pictures much better if they comprehend w... more The thesis advanced is that people remember nonsensical pictures much better if they comprehend what they are about. Two experiments supported this thesis. In the first, nonsensical “droodles” were studied by subjects with or without an accompanying verbal interpretation of the pictures. Free recall was much better for subjects receiving the interpretation during study. Also, a later recognition test showed

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