Authors
Attila Keresztes, Daniel Kaiser, Gyula Kovács, Mihály Racsmány
Publication date
2014/11/1
Journal
Cerebral Cortex
Volume
24
Issue
11
Pages
3025-3035
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
The testing effect refers to the phenomenon that repeated retrieval of memories promotes better long-term retention than repeated study. To investigate the neural correlates of the testing effect, we used event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging methods while participants performed a cued recall task. Prior to the neuroimaging experiment, participants learned Swahili–German word pairs, then half of the word pairs were repeatedly studied, whereas the other half were repeatedly tested. For half of the participants, the neuroimaging experiment was performed immediately after the learning phase; a 1-week retention interval was inserted for the other half of the participants. We found that a large network of areas identified in a separate 2-back functional localizer scan were active during the final recall of the word pair associations. Importantly, the learning strategy (retest or restudy) of the word pairs …
Total citations
201420152016201720182019202020212022202320246108410551010103