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The Tip-of-the-Tongue Phenomenon

Brown & McNeill (1966) - When Memory Blocks but Knowledge Leaks Through

You KNOW the word, but you can't retrieve it!

The tip-of-the-tongue (TOT) state is one of the most fascinating memory phenomena. You're certain you know a word, yet it remains maddeningly inaccessible—even as fragments leak through: the first letter, the number of syllables, similar-sounding words.

Brown & McNeill's 1966 study proved this wasn't just an illusion—during TOT states, people really DO have partial access to the blocked word's structure!

Experience TOT States

You'll see definitions of uncommon English words. For each one:

  • Know it? Type the word
  • Don't know it? Click "Don't Know"
  • It's on the tip of your tongue? Report what you DO know about it!

Let's see if your partial knowledge during TOT states is accurate...

Word 1 of 8
What word fits this definition?

The Answer Was:

Your Results

0
Words Shown
0
Knew Correctly
0
TOT States
0
Didn't Know

TOT Partial Knowledge Accuracy

First Letter Correct
Syllable Count Correct

Why Does This Happen?

Memory retrieval is not all-or-nothing. Words are stored with multiple features: meaning, sound (phonology), spelling (orthography), and grammatical properties. During a TOT state, you've accessed the meaning but the phonological form is temporarily blocked.

Brown & McNeill's Key Finding: During TOT states, participants correctly identified:

  • First letter: ~57% correct (vs. 8% by chance)
  • Number of syllables: ~47% correct
  • Similar-sounding words that shared phonological features

The Paradox: You can't retrieve the word, yet you have genuine knowledge about it. The TOT state proves memory is distributed—different features can be accessed independently. The word's "ghost" is there even when the word itself isn't.

Brown, R., & McNeill, D. (1966). The "tip of the tongue" phenomenon. Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior, 5(4), 325-337.