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Title: Level of processing and age affect involuntary conceptual priming of weak but not strong associates. Author: Ramponi C, Richardson-Klavehn A, Gardiner JM. Journal: Exp Psychol; 2004; 51(3):159-64. PubMed ID: 15267124. Abstract: Memory for weak and strong semantic associates was compared in intentional associate-cued-recall and incidental free-association tests. This design yielded four conditions (weak/intentional, strong/intentional, weak/incidental, and strong/ incidental) on which younger and older adults were compared. Level of processing (LOP) and age effects occurred for the weak/intentional, strong/intentional, and weak/incidental conditions, but not for the strong/incidental condition. Because participants could not distinguish weak from strong associates during the memory tests, these results suggest that free-association priming was involuntary and was not contaminated by voluntary retrieval strategies. Instead, they suggest that encoding deficits related to shallower LOP and older age reduce involuntary free-association priming mainly for associates without cohesive preexperimental representations.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]