1996
DOI: 10.1037/0033-295x.103.4.734
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One hundred years of forgetting: A quantitative description of retention.

Abstract: A sample of 210 published data sets were assembled that (a) plotted amount remembered versus time, (b) had 5 or more points, and (cj were smooth enough to fit at least 1 of the functions tested with a correlation coefficient of .90 or greater. Each was fit to 105 different 2-parameter functions. The best fits were to the logarithmic function, the power function, the exponential in the square root of time, and the hyperbola in the square root of time. It is difficult to distinguish among these 4 functions with … Show more

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Cited by 676 publications
(700 citation statements)
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References 123 publications
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“…A total of 77 data sets from 16 studies were used in the landscaping analyses. With the exception of five data sets from Rubin et al (1999), they are a subset of those used by Rubin and Wenzel's (1996) review (Some of the methodological details from the studies are presented in Appendix Table 1. Fits of five retention models using ln(ML) to five data sets of Rubin et al (1999;top), the average fit to the remaining 72 data sets (bottom).…”
Section: Methodsological Issuesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…A total of 77 data sets from 16 studies were used in the landscaping analyses. With the exception of five data sets from Rubin et al (1999), they are a subset of those used by Rubin and Wenzel's (1996) review (Some of the methodological details from the studies are presented in Appendix Table 1. Fits of five retention models using ln(ML) to five data sets of Rubin et al (1999;top), the average fit to the remaining 72 data sets (bottom).…”
Section: Methodsological Issuesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We begin by summarizing recent work comparing models of retention. Rubin and Wenzel (1996) attempted to provide some clarity on the form of the retention function by performing a data-fitting meta-analysis. Some 105 two-parameter functions were fit to 210 data sets that were collected throughout the 20 th century.…”
Section: Retention Data and Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…There is a long tradition of work on forgetting functions in the adult literature (e.g., Ebbinghaus, 1885;Rubin & Wenzel, 1996;Wixted & Ebbesen, 1991 and in the developmental literature there have been examinations of the variance in long-term recall that can be explained by forgetting shortly after experience of an event (e.g., Bauer, 2005;Bauer, Van Abbema, & de Haan, 1999;Howe & O'Sullivan, 1997; discussed in more detail below). However, until the beginning of the 21st century, there were virtually no data that directly addressed the suggestion that the characteristic distribution of autobiographical memories across the life span-including the phenomenon of childhood amnesia-could be explained in part by the relative vulnerability of memory traces formed early in life.…”
Section: The Vulnerability Of Memory Traces Declines Over Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To answer this question, one should first consider why and how the nervous system forgets. Huge data sets exist on human forgetting [for a review see, for example, (Rubin and Wenzel 1996)] that show, as expected from everyday life, that we forget with higher probability as time passes. The exact shape of this forgetting curve is still under debate [exponential or power law; (Wixted and Ebbesen 1991;Anderson and Tweney 1997)].…”
Section: Why Time Scales?mentioning
confidence: 99%