Bwa. Whittlesea et Ld. Williams, WHY DO STRANGERS FEEL FAMILIAR, BUT FRIENDS DONT - A DISCREPANCY-ATTRIBUTION ACCOUNT OF FEELINGS OF FAMILIARITY, Acta psychologica, 98(2-3), 1998, pp. 141-165
Recent articles on familiarity (e.g. Whittlesea, B.W.A., 1993. Journal
of Experimental Psychology 19, 1235) have argued that the feeling of
familiarity is produced by unconscious attribution of fluent processin
g to a source in the past. In this article, we refine that notion: We
argue that it is not fluency per se, but rather fluent processing occu
rring under unexpected circumstances that produces the feeling. We dem
onstrate cases in which moderately fluent processing produces more fam
iliarity than does highly fluent processing, at least when the former
is surprising. (C) 1998 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.