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Dive into the research topics where Joan G. Snodgrass is active.

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Featured researches published by Joan G. Snodgrass.


Psychology and Aging | 1999

Episodic priming and memory for temporal source: event-related potentials reveal age-related differences in prefrontal functioning.

Charlotte Trott; David Friedman; Walter Ritter; Monica Fabiani; Joan G. Snodgrass

Event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded from young (M = 25) and older (M = 71) adults during a recognition memory paradigm that assessed episodic priming. Participants studied two temporally distinct lists of sentences (each with two unassociated nouns). At test, in response to the nouns, participants made old-new, followed by remember (context)-know (familiarity) and source (i.e., list) judgments. Both young and older adults showed equivalent episodic priming effects. However, compared to the young adults, the older adults showed a greater source performance decrement than item memory performance decrement. Both age groups showed equivalent posterior-maximal old-new ERP effects. However, only the young produced a frontal-maximal, late onset old-new effect that differed as a function of subsequent list attribution. Because source memory is thought to be mediated by prefrontal cortex, we conclude that age-related memory differences may be due to a deficit in a prefrontal cortical system that underlies source memory and are not likely to be due to an age-related decline in episodic priming.


Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory and Cognition | 1986

The role of visual similarity in picture categorization.

Joan G. Snodgrass; Brian McCullough

Categorization is usually assumed to require access to a concepts meaning. When pictures are categorized faster than words, they are assumed to be understood faster than words. However, pictures from the same category are more similar than pictures from different categories. The present article argues that the use of visual similarity as a cue to category membership may produce the picture advantage. The visual similarity hypothesis was tested in two experiments. In the first experiment, pictures showed a disadvantage for the visually similar categories of fruits and vegetables, but showed their usual advantage for the visually dissimilar categories of fruits and animals. In the second experiment, with a mixed list design, pictures were slower only for visually similar different decisions, but showed the usual advantage for all other decisions. The reliability of visual similarity as a cue to the decision accounted well for these results. Because visual similarity can be shown to have large effects on picture categorization, the use of categorization to compare speed of understanding of pictures and words is questionable.


Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory and Cognition | 1994

Dissociations among implicit and explicit memory tasks: the role of stimulus similarity.

Joan G. Snodgrass; Elliot Hirshman

This article compares the effect of picture fragmentation level at study on performance on a variety of implicit and explicit memory tests. Consistent with previous research, a moderately fragmented study picture produced the most learning on the implicit memory task of picture fragment completion (Experiment 1) and speeded picture identification (Experiment 4). In contrast, an intact study picture produced the most learning on the implicit memory task of naming intact pictures (Experiment 3). These results suggest that performance on 2 implicit memory tasks can be dissociated by differences in visual similarity between the study and test forms of a stimulus. More surprising, parallel effects were observed in recognition memory. Recognition memory was best when fragmentation levels of the study and test pictures matched (Experiment 2) or were comparable (Experiment 1). In contrast to many results in the literature, recognition memory was acutely sensitive to surface form differences. We discuss the results in terms of 2 types of study-test similarity-stimulus similarity and process similarity.


Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory and Cognition | 1998

On the generality of the perceptual closure effect.

Joan G. Snodgrass; Kinjo H

Perceptual closure is a process whereby an incomplete stimulus is perceived to be complete. J. G. Snodgrass and K. Feenan (1990) argued that perceptual closure during a study episode is an important factor in producing large priming effects in picture fragment identification. They found that a moderately fragmented study picture produced more priming than either a very fragmented or an intact study picture and argued that this inverted U-shaped function is a signature of the perceptual closure effect. The experiments in this study, extend these results to word fragment identification by showing that (a) the most effective prime, for both unspeeded and speeded word fragment identification is a moderately fragmented study word; (b) the sharpness of the U-shaped gradient is the same whether the perceptual feedback during study is a word (in a font different from that of the fragmented study word) or a picture; and (c) although a fragmented study picture primes subsequent word fragment identification, it does not produce the inverted U-shaped function, thereby showing that perceptual closure reflects perceptual rather than conceptual priming.


Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology | 1994

Implicit retrieval processes in cued recall: Implications for aging effects in memory

David Friedman; Joan G. Snodgrass; Walter Ritter

Aging produces deficits in what has come to be called explicit or direct memory, in which subjects must consciously retrieve information from long-term memory. In contrast, many studies have shown that when implicit or indirect memory is tested, old and young subjects perform equivalently. The present study manipulated orienting instructions (structural vs. semantic) for indirect (stem completion) and direct (cued recall) memory tasks for both young and old subjects. Contrary to previous research, older subjects produced equivalent performance to young subjects on the direct test as well as on the indirect test, and performance of both groups was worse in the direct than indirect test. In addition, semantic orienting activity at study led to greater learning on the indirect test than structural orienting for both groups, although the levels of processing effect was greater for the direct test. We attribute the unexpected lack of age difference on the direct test to its difficulty, which led subjects to adopt an implicit (generate + recognize) rather than an explicit retrieval strategy during the cued recall task. Because the elderly are not impaired with regard to either implicit retrieval or recognition, this strategy produced equivalent performance in the two groups.


Journal of Experimental Psychology: General | 1988

Pragmatics of measuring recognition memory : applications to dementia and amnesia

Joan G. Snodgrass; June Corwin


Journal of Experimental Psychology: General | 1990

Priming effects in picture fragment completion : support for the perceptual closure hypothesis

Joan G. Snodgrass; Kelly Feenan


Cerebral Cortex | 2001

Remembering the Color of Objects: An ERP Investigation of Source Memory

Yael M. Cycowicz; David Friedman; Joan G. Snodgrass


Journal of Experimental Psychology | 1967

SOME EXPERIMENTS ON SIMPLE AND CHOICE REACTION TIME.

Joan G. Snodgrass; R. Duncan Luce; Eugene Galanter


Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory and Cognition | 1990

Conceptual priming in fragment completion

Elliot Hirshman; Joan G. Snodgrass; Janet Mindes; Kelly Feenan

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Elliot Hirshman

George Washington University

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Walter Ritter

Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research

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