transferappropriate
Transfer-appropriate processing (TAP) is a theory in cognitive psychology that emphasizes the match between the cognitive processes used at encoding and those required at retrieval. Proposed by Morris, Bransford, and Franks in 1977, it argues that memory performance depends not only on how information is encoded but also on how well the encoding operations align with the demands of the retrieval task.
The core claim is that memory will be best when the processing engaged during encoding closely resembles
TAP is related to, but distinct from, encoding specificity and the levels-of-processing framework. Encoding specificity emphasizes
Overall, transfer-appropriate processing provides a framework for predicting when certain encoding strategies will improve retrieval by