In two experiments, the trade-off and the redundancy hypotheses for re
lational and item-specific information proposed by Hunt and Seta (1984
) were tested. Lists consisting of categories of varying sizes were pr
esented under categorising instructions and under pleasantness-rating
instructions. Memory was tested in free recall and a recognition test.
Different measures were used for relational and item-specific informa
tion. According to the trade-off hypothesis, the amount of relational
information should increase with increasing category size, and at the
same time, the amount of item-specific information should decrease. Th
is hypothesis could not be confirmed. Whereas the amount of relational
information increased with increasing category size, the amount of it
em-specific information did not decrease. The redundancy hypothesis as
sumes that relational and item-specific information depend on category
size only if the relevant information is not provided otherwise, as b
y orienting tasks. This hypothesis could not be conformed either. Rath
er, relational encoding is supplemented when both orienting task and t
he list structure focus encoding of that type of information. Item-spe
cific encoding, on the other hand, is independent of category size and
increases when the instruction focuses on it. The findings of free re
call show that free recall is determined by more than the interplay of
relational and item-specific information in an additive manner.