Conversely, deep processing (e.g., semantic processing) results in a more durable memory trace.
However, the brain undergoes deeper processing to resolve the ambiguity.
This can occur from individuals seeking out emotional support and a deeper processing of the possible circumstance that led to the negative mood.
They argue that these processing effects are "circular" in the sense that deep processing can be considered as just better remembering.
This is because creating synonyms requires deeper processing than just duplicating a word.
The knowledge-intensive approach of deep linguistic processing requires considerable computational power, and has in the past sometimes been judged as being intractable.
However, research in the early 2000s had made considerable advancement in efficiency of deep processing.
The shortlist above is not exhaustively representative of all the communities working on deep linguistic processing.
Same-race faces are more correctly and easily discerned because deep processing, than other-race faces are.
The main idea behind the levels of processing theory is that deeper processing leads to better encoding and, therefore, better retrieval.