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Cognitive psychology of human memory (thesaurus)

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Concept information

information entity > theoretical entity > testable hypothesis > Skaggs-Robinson hypothesis

Preferred term

Skaggs-Robinson hypothesis  

Definition

  • The hypothesis that the degree of retroactive interference is a function of the degree of similarity between the primary memory task and the secondary memory task. When the two tasks are identical or nearly identical, retention of items from the primary task is assumed to be high. If the degree of similarity is intermediate, retention of items from the primary task is assumed to be low. If the two tasks are different, retention of items from the primary task is assumed to be better, but not at the highest level (Robinson, 1927; Skaggs, 1925).

Broader concept

Entry terms

  • similarity paradox
  • Skaggs-Robinson curve
  • Skaggs-Robinson law

Belongs to group

Bibliographic citation(s)

Creator

  • Frank Arnould

In other languages

URI

http://data.loterre.fr/ark:/67375/P66-KC2WLH2Z-9

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