# Encoding Effort Eliminates the Animacy Advantage in Memory When Manipulated with Value-Directed Remembering

**Authors:** Julia N. Keiner, Nicolasa C. Villalobos, T. D. Kelley, Michael J. Serra

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/bs16010030 · Behavioral Sciences · 2025-12-23

## TL;DR

People remember animate words better than inanimate ones, but this advantage disappears when they focus more effort on inanimate words.

## Contribution

The study shows that the animacy advantage in memory can be eliminated by manipulating encoding effort.

## Key findings

- Participants recalled more animate words than inanimate words under normal conditions.
- Higher encoding effort conditions increased recall of inanimate words, eliminating the animacy advantage.
- The animacy effect interacted with encoding effort, supporting the encoding-effort explanation.

## Abstract

People are more likely to remember words that refer to living/animate things than nonliving/inanimate things across various memory tasks, yielding an animacy advantage in recall. We tested an encoding-effort explanation for this effect: that people naturally devote more attention or encoding effort to living things over nonliving things during encoding, producing the effect. We used both between-participants (Experiment 1) and within-participants (Experiment 2) manipulations of value (i.e., participants earned a different number of points for each word they recalled) to affect encoding effort at the task and item level, respectively. We predicted that leading participants to devote more encoding effort to the items (in particular, the inanimate words) would reduce or even eliminate the animacy advantage, as has been found in some prior studies that used mental-imagery manipulations. Overall, participants recalled more animate words than inanimate words and recalled more words under higher-effort than under lower-effort conditions. In line with our predictions, these two factors interacted: the animacy effect was eliminated under higher-effort conditions, as these conditions led to an increase in the recall of inanimate words compared to animate words. The results therefore support an encoding-effort explanation for the animacy advantage in free-recall performance.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12837967/full.md

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12837967/full.md

## References

61 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12837967/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12837967