Abstract

In three experiments the specificity of an effective reactivation stimulus, or reminder, was examined. Two weeks after learning to produce movement in a crib mobile by footkicking, 3-month-old human infants showed no retention of the response-reinforcer contingency. A reactivation procedure 24 hours prior to the long-term retention test was effective if the reminder was a brief noncontingent exposure to the original 5-component training mobile or a mobile containing one novel substitution. When more than one novel component were substituted into the original mobile, the reminder was ineffective. This was predicted by the discrimination function 24 hours following training. A reminder containing only a single familiar (predictive) component and four novel ones was also moderately effective. In subsequent studies, we explored different interpretations of the reminder specificity effect. We hypothesize that reminder specificity is of particular adaptive value for developing organisms in providing a buffer against memory retrieval in inappropriate contexts.

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