What's in an Association? The Relationship Between Similarity and Episodic Memory for Associations
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What's in an Association? The Relationship Between Similarity and Episodic Memory for Associations

Abstract

When two events occur closely in time, an “association” exists between memories for those events. When a pair of associ- ated events is semantically similar, it is easier to recognize the complete pair and easier to tell the complete pair apart from pairs of events that did not co-occur; there is also, however, a bias to report that similar events had co-occurred, even when they had not. A new experiment shows that these phenomena occur whenever two events share features, whether those fea- tures are perceptual or conceptual in nature and whether the events themselves are verbal or non-verbal. We present a dy- namic model for storage and recognition of associations that shows how all these results can be explained by the princi- ple that shared features lead to correlated processing of similar events, which in turn increases capacity to process associative information.

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