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Increasing capacity: practice effects in absolute identification

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posted on 2025-05-09, 23:44 authored by Pennie Dodds, Christopher Donkin, Scott BrownScott Brown, Andrew HeathcoteAndrew Heathcote
In most of the long history of the study of absolute identification - since Miller's (1956) seminal article - a severe limit on performance has been observed, and this limit has resisted improvement even by extensive practice. In a startling result, Rouder, Morey, Cowan, and Pfaltz (2004) found substantially improved performance with practice in the absolute identification of line lengths, albeit for only 3 participants and in a somewhat atypical paradigm. We investigated the limits of this effect and found that it also occurs in more typical paradigms, is not limited to a few virtuoso participants or due to relative judgment strategies, and generalizes to some (e.g., line inclination and tone frequency) but not other (e.g., tone loudness) dimensions. We also observed, apart from differences between dimensions, 2 unusual aspects of improvement with practice: (a) a positive correlation between initial performance and the effect of practice and (b) a large reduction in a characteristic trial-to-trial decision bias with practice.

History

Journal title

Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory and Cognition

Volume

37

Issue

2

Pagination

477-492

Publisher

American Psychological Association

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Science and Information Technology

Rights statement

This article may not exactly replicate the final version published in the APA journal. It is not the copy of record.

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