Abstract
Ss either saw or heard lists of three syllables which differed by their initial consonant phoneme or their final vowel phoneme. After 5 or 15 sec of mental arithmetic, Ss were required to recall the syllables. Following auditory presentation, vowels were recalled more accurately than consonants in all serial positions and at both delays. In addition, spoken consonants and vowels showed primacy and recency effects. Following visual presentation, consonants and vowels were recalled with equal accuracy at both delays, and no recency effects were observed. These data suggest that superior recall of vowels over consonants results from differential decay of these stimuli in an acoustic storage. These data are consistent with previous experiments showing that, during serial recall, the final vowels in a sequence are recalled more accurately than the final consonants.
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This research was supported in part by a grant from the National Research Council of Canada awarded to the first author.
Now at the University of Nebraska at Lincoln, Lincoln
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Cole, R.A., Sales, B.D. & Haber, R.N. Mechanisms of aural encoding: VII. Differences in consonant and vowel recall in a Peterson and Peterson short-term memory paradigm. Memory & Cognition 2, 211–214 (1974). https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03208984
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03208984