主題演講摘要
鄭昭明教授 (Cheng, Chao-Ming)
  Processes of conscious and unconscious memory
Processes of conscious and unconscious forms of human memory were explored in three implicit tests (stem completion, word association, and word identification) by examining how the two forms of memory within each test were differently affected by level-of-processing (LOP) and self-generation of study words. A post-test dissociation (PTD) procedure was used to separate the two forms of memory within each test without being contaminated by memory and guessing effects produced by post-test judgments. Results show that both LOP and generation produced positive effects, associated with either a positive effect (in the tests of stem completion and word identification) or a null effect (in the test of word association) of repetition priming under shallow processing, on estimates of conscious memory. On the other hand, LOP produced null effects and generation produced reverse effects accompanied by a repetition-inhibition effect under generation on estimates of unconscious memory. This pattern of results suggests that conscious memory of a studied word benefits from either perceptual or conceptual processing of the word at study depending upon the number of processing modes matched between the test and the study. On the contrary, unconscious memory of a studied word either (1) benefits from stimulus encoding at study to the extent that the stimulus encodings at test and at study form the same information Gestalt or (2) either suffers inhibitions or does not benefit from stimulus encoding at study to the extent that the stimulus encodings at study and at test form different information Gestalten. The inhibition aspect of the assumption is based on the reasoning that the information Gestalt formed by encoded information about a study word and other types of information (e.g., either information about generation cues or information about an associate of the study word) will inhibit its part from being triggered by a different information Gestalt provided at test.