Primenjena Psihologija (Nov 2022)

PERCEPTUAL RICHNESS OF WORDS AND ITS ROLE IN FREE AND CUED RECALL

  • Milica Popović Stijačić,
  • Dušica Filipović Đurđević

DOI
https://doi.org/10.19090/pp.v15i3.2400
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 3

Abstract

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This research aimed to clarify the role of the perceptual richness of words (PR) in the recall tasks. PR was operationalized as the number of sensory modalities through which an object can be perceived. Previously, we found that concepts experienced with many modalities (dog) were recalled more accurately in cued recall than those perceived with few modalities (rainbow) and abstract words. This finding fitted the Perceptual symbol system theory (PSST) and the Dual coding theory (DCT) predictions. We tested the PR effect in both cued (experiment 1- E1) and free recall tasks (experiment 2 – E2) in the present study. With careful stimuli manipulation, we wanted to exclude explanations of context availability, emotional valence and arousal and to test alternative explanations of the concreteness effect offered by the relational-distinctiveness hypothesis. The additional perceptual codes improved recall accuracy in the cued recall task (E1), which was in line with the PSST and the DCT. This conclusion is straightforward: two critical groups of concrete words were matched for concreteness and visual perceptual strength. Thus, more accurate recall of concepts experienced with many modalities can be attributed to richer perceptual experience. However, the relational information was essential for recall accuracy in the free recall task (E2), as hypothesized by the relational-distinctiveness hypothesis.

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