The primary goal of the current study was to assess whether different retrieval processes moderated the effect of encoding variability on accurate performance on the A-B' test format of the forced-choice Mnemonic Similarity Task (MST). Young adults completed the A-B' test format of the forced-choice MST and determined whether their recognition memory judgment was based on recall-to-reject processing, recall-to-accept processing, familiarity, or guessing. When guesses were excluded from correct trials, fixation counts were higher to the A stimulus than the B stimulus at encoding. Contrary to our expectation that greater fixations to the A versus B stimulus at encoding would be associated with reliance on familiarity or recall-to-accept processing and greater fixations to the B versus A stimulus would be associated with recall-to-reject processing, no interaction between the stimulus and the subsequently reported memory process was observed.
Keywords: Encoding variability; Eye-tracking; Familiarity; Guess; Mnemonic discrimination; Recall-to-reject; Recognition; Recollection.
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