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    Br J Psychol. 2008 May;99(Pt 2):293-306. Epub 2007 Jul 24.

    Chewing gum and context-dependent memory: the independent roles of chewing gum and mint flavour.

    Johnson AJ, Miles C.

    Cardiff University, School of Psychology, Cardiff, UK. JohnsonAJ@Cardiff.ac.uk

    Two experiments independently investigated the basis of the chewing gum induced context-dependent memory effect. At learning and/or recall, participants either chewed flavourless gum (Experiment 1) or received mint-flavoured strips (Experiment 2). No context-dependent memory effect was found with either flavourless gum or mint-flavoured strips, indicating that independently the contexts were insufficiently salient to induce the effect. This is found despite participants' subjective ratings indicating a perceived change in state following administration of flavourless gum or mint-flavoured strips. Additionally, some preliminary evidence for a non-additive facilitative effect of receiving gum or flavour at either learning and/or recall is reported. The findings raise further concerns regarding the robustness of the previously reported context-dependent memory effect with chewing gum.

    PMID: 17651533 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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