Abstract
The order of recall of lists of words learned incidentally was analyzed by multidimensional scaling similarity matrices based on the number of times words were retrieved next to each other. For the semantic domains of mammals, birds, and kinship terms, retrieval from very long-term memory, both for groups and individuals, and recall of recently learned lists produced multidimensional solutions similar to published solutions based on judged relatedness and associative overlap. For the squares of the Monopoly board and the names of the members of the Lawrence University faculty, for which clear a priori category structures exist, the form of clustering in the order and timing of recall that is commonly found in recall of lists learned recently in the laboratory was also found in the retrieval of lists learned incidentally through multiple exposures over long periods of time in the real world.
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The research was supported by a grant from Lawrence University. Part of this paper was read at the annual convention of the American Psychological Association, Toronto, August 1978.
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Rubin, D.C., Olson, M.J. Recall of semantic domains. Memory & Cognition 8, 354–366 (1980). https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03198275
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03198275