The efficiency of a functional retrieval cue in eliciting recall of an item declines as the number of items it subsumes

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answerhappygod
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The efficiency of a functional retrieval cue in eliciting recall of an item declines as the number of items it subsumes

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The efficiency of a functional retrieval cue in eliciting
recall of an item declines as the number of items it
subsumes increases.
Which of the following principles discussed
a) The reconstructive principle
b) The impurity principle
c) The specificity principle
d) The cue overload principle
2. Tasks and processes are not pure, and therefore
one cannot separate out the contributions of
different memory stores by using tasks thought to
tap only one system. Which of the following
principles discussed in class best captures this?
a) The cue-driven principle
b) The impurity principle
c) The specificity principle
d) The cue overload principle
3. A memory depends on the relation between the
encoding conditions and the retrieval conditions.
Which of the following principles discussed in class
best captures this?
a) The reconstructive principle
b) The impurity principle
c) The specificity principle
d) The encoding-retrieval principle
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