Abstract
Undergraduate volunteers rated a series of words for pleasantness while hearing a particular background music. The subjects in Experiment 1 received, immediately or after a 48-h delay, an unexpected word-recall test in one of the following musical cue contexts:same cue (S),different cue (D), orno cue (N). For immediate recall, context dependency (S — D) was significant but same-cue facilitation (S — N) was not. No cue effects at all were found for delayed recall, and there was a significant interaction between cue and retention interval. A similar interaction was also found in Experiment 3, which was designed to rule out an alternative explanation with respect to distraction. When the different musical selection was changed specifically in either tempo or form (genre), only pieces having an altered tempo produced significantly lower immediate recall compared with the same pieces (Experiment 2). The results support a stimulus generalization view of music-dependent memory.
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Preparation of this article was supported in part by Faculty Development grants to the first author from Pennsylvania State University.
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Balch, W.R., Bowman, K. & Mohler, L.A. Music-dependent memory in immediate and delayed word recall. Mem Cogn 20, 21–28 (1992). https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03208250
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03208250