The underlying mechanism for process dissociation in recognition: Performance, response latency, and eyeblink in a three-process model

Authors
Citation
H. Ohira, The underlying mechanism for process dissociation in recognition: Performance, response latency, and eyeblink in a three-process model, JPN J PSYCH, 69(6), 1999, pp. 449-458
Citations number
32
Categorie Soggetti
Psycology
Journal title
JAPANESE JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY
ISSN journal
00215236 → ACNP
Volume
69
Issue
6
Year of publication
1999
Pages
449 - 458
Database
ISI
SICI code
0021-5236(199902)69:6<449:TUMFPD>2.0.ZU;2-K
Abstract
Jacoby (1991) proposed a process-dissociation procedure to estimate contrib utions of conscious and unconscious processes to cognitive task performance . The present research examined the inner processing mechanism underlying t he procedure. Thirty-two female undergraduates learned a list of visual sti mulus words and another of auditory stimulus. They then performed recogniti on memory tasks in which conscious and unconscious memory components presum ably either help or interfere with each other. Memory performance, response latency, and eyeblink activity were analyzed based on the framework of the process-dissociation procedure. A three-process model of recognition, with an underlying hypothetical processing mechanism, was proposed to explain t he complicated results obtained of the three dependent measures.