Windschitl, P. D. (1996). Memory for faces: Evidence of retrieval-based impairment.
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 22,
1101-1122.
Investigated
whether and how interpolated faces cause impairment to memories for related
target faces. In 4 experiments, Ss viewed target faces and then saw a presentation
of interpolated faces that were related to some of the targets. Modified tests,
which offered target and novel faces as recognition alternatives, detected impairment
effects after short retention intervals but not after 48-hr intervals, indicating
that spontaneous recovery had occurred. For the interpolated presentations,
some Ss were misled to believe that the faces were the same as the targets,
and other Ss were informed that the faces were similar but different. The impairment
and recovery effects were not moderated by Ss' beliefs about the interpolated
faces. The recovery effects suggest that interpolated faces affected the retrieval
but not the storage of memories for targets, even for Ss who were successfully
misled about the interpolated faces.