“Application of the Testing and Spacing Effects to Name Learning”, 2005-03-14 (; backlinks; similar):
4 experiments investigated the effects of testing and spacing on the learning of face-name stimulus-response pairs:
Experiments 1a & 1b compared the recall of names following intervening tests versus additional study opportunities and found that testing produced better retention of names.
Experiments 2 & 3 explored the effects of repeated tests versus study for massed, uniform, or expanded spacing intervals.
Tested names were better retained than studied names, spaced names were better retained than massed names, and memory was best for items tested at spaced intervals. Contrary to past findings, expanded schedules did not yield better memory than uniform schedules in either experiment.
Theoretical implications for the testing and spacing effects are discussed, along with effective name-learning techniques based on these principles.