E. Vakil et al., SAVING DURING RELEARNING AS AN IMPLICIT MEASURE OF MEMORY IN CLOSED-HEAD-INJURED PATIENTS, Neuropsychiatry, neuropsychology, and behavioral neurology, 9(3), 1996, pp. 171-175
Memory disturbance is the most prominent residual deficit after closed
-head injury (CHI). Recent studies have demonstrated that CHI patients
, just like global amnesic patients, show impaired memory when measure
d explicitly, but not when measured implicitly. Many theorists have co
ncluded that the saving paradigm introduced by Ebbinghaus in 1885 can
be viewed as a measure of implicit memory. Thus, it was hypothesized t
hat saving will be preserved in CHI patients, Thirteen CHI patients an
d 13 control subjects were tested individually on three word lists. Ea
ch list was tested in two phases: learning and relearning. There was a
different time delay between the two phases for each list: 1 h, 1 day
, and 3 days. The groups were compared on explicit-recall and implicit
-saving measures of memory. Time delay from learning to relearning did
not affect the performance of either group. As expected, the results
show that overall, the control group recalled more words than the CHI
group, but the groups did not differ on the overall amount of saving m
easure. However, when saving was measured just on the initial learning
and relearning trials, the groups did differ. The results are discuss
ed in terms of the relationship between saving and implicit memory.