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1.
Mem Cognit ; 48(4): 623-644, 2020 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31808050

ABSTRACT

An important discovery in false-memory research is Israel and Schacter's (Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 4, 577-581, 1997) finding that presenting pictures at study relative to words alone reduces false memory in the DRM paradigm, a result that has been replicated many times. The standard interpretation is that memory for visual processing of the pictures can be used to reject the critical distractors, which were not explicitly present at study. Beginning from the empirical observation that the pictures used by Israel and Schacter are not consistently labelled with the DRM word they are supposed to represent, we present a series of four studies designed to determine if it is the presentation of pictures or the mismatch between the pictures and the words that reduces false memory. The results across the four experiments demonstrate that picture presentation at study is neither necessary nor sufficient to reduce false memory in the DRM and the categorical associate paradigms. However, we discuss other studies in which picture processing clearly is responsible for reduction of false alarms and note that these studies use study materials and memory tests that are different from the DRM and categorical associate paradigms in that critical lures are externally provided rather than generated. We speculate that the effectiveness of memory for visual processing for reducing false memory may depend on the source of the false memory, but this remains for future research.


Subject(s)
Memory , Visual Perception , Cognition , Humans , Israel
2.
J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn ; 43(2): 189-204, 2017 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27504679

ABSTRACT

Successful completion of delayed intentions is a common but important aspect of daily behavior. Such behavior requires not only memory for the intended action but also recognition of the opportunity to perform that action, known collectively as prospective memory. The fact that prospective memory tasks occur in the midst of other activities is captured in laboratory tasks by embedding the prospective memory task in an ongoing activity. In many cases the requirement to perform the prospective memory task results in a reduction in ongoing performance relative to when the ongoing task is performed alone. This is referred to as the cost to the ongoing task and reflects the allocation of attentional resources to the prospective memory task. The current study examined the pattern of cost across the ongoing task when the ongoing task provided contextual information that in turn allowed participants to anticipate when target events would occur within the ongoing task. The availability of contextual information reduced ongoing task response times overall, with an increase in response times closer to the target locations (Experiments 1-3). The fourth study, drawing on the Event Segmentation Theory, provided support for the proposal made by the Preparatory Attentional and Memory Processes theory of prospective memory that decisions about the allocation of attention to the prospective memory task are more likely to be made at points of transition. (PsycINFO Database Record


Subject(s)
Attention/physiology , Intention , Memory, Episodic , Memory/physiology , Adolescent , Adult , Analysis of Variance , Female , Humans , Male , Photic Stimulation , Reaction Time/physiology , Recognition, Psychology , Young Adult
3.
Psychol Aging ; 31(2): 198-209, 2016 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26866586

ABSTRACT

The isolation paradigm is often used for studying the effects of distinctiveness on memory. Within this paradigm the isolated item can appear early or late in the list. Most prior studies using the isolation paradigm with older adults placed the isolated items late in the study list, however, Smith (2011) used an early isolation list and found that older adults showed an early isolation effect when the dimension of isolation was more readily detected (numbers vs. letters) but did not show an isolation effect when the dimension of difference was more subtle (category membership). The current experiments replicate these findings and demonstrate judgments of learning are elevated for the isolated item in the former case, but not in the latter case, for young and older adults.


Subject(s)
Aging/psychology , Cognition , Judgment , Memory , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Female , Humans , Young Adult
4.
J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn ; 42(3): 339-50, 2016 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26280355

ABSTRACT

The experiments reported here were designed to replicate and extend McCabe, Roediger, and Karpicke's (2011) finding that retrieval in category cued recall involves both controlled and automatic processes. The extension entailed identifying whether distinctive encoding affected 1 or both of these 2 processes. The first experiment successfully replicated McCabe et al., but the second, which added a critical baseline condition, produced data inconsistent with a 2 independent process model of recall. The third experiment provided evidence that retrieval in category cued recall reflects a generate-recognize strategy, with the effect of distinctive processing being localized to recognition. Overall, the data suggest that category cued recall evokes a generate-recognize retrieval strategy and that the subprocesses underlying this strategy can be dissociated as a function of distinctive versus relational encoding processes.


Subject(s)
Cues , Mental Recall , Humans , Models, Psychological , Psychological Tests , Recognition, Psychology
5.
Psychol Aging ; 30(3): 647-55, 2015 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26213799

ABSTRACT

Prior work shows that false memories resulting from the study of associatively related lists are reduced for both young and older adults when the auditory presentation of study list words is accompanied by related pictures relative to when auditory word presentation is combined with visual presentation of the word. In contrast, young adults, but not older adults, show a reduction in false memories when presented with the visual word along with the auditory word relative to hearing the word only. In both cases of pictures relative to visual words and visual words relative to auditory words alone, the benefit of picture and visual words in reducing false memories has been explained in terms of monitoring for perceptual information. In our first experiment, we provide the first simultaneous comparison of all 3 study presentation modalities (auditory only, auditory plus visual word, and auditory plus picture). Young and older adults show a reduction in false memories in the auditory plus picture condition, but only young adults show a reduction in the visual word condition relative to the auditory only condition. A second experiment investigates whether older adults fail to show a reduction in false memory in the visual word condition because they do not encode perceptual information in the visual word condition. In addition, the second experiment provides evidence that the failure of older adults to show the benefits of visual word presentation is related to reduced cognitive resources. (PsycINFO Database Record


Subject(s)
Aging/psychology , Auditory Perception/physiology , Language , Memory/physiology , Visual Perception/physiology , Acoustic Stimulation , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Cognition Disorders/psychology , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Photic Stimulation , Young Adult
6.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24628461

ABSTRACT

Remembering to perform an action in the future, called prospective memory, often shows age-related differences in favor of young adults when tested in the laboratory. Recently Smith, Horn, and Bayen (2012; Aging, Neuropsychology, and Cognition, 19, 495) embedded a PM task in an ongoing color-matching task and manipulated the difficulty of the ongoing task by varying the number of colors on each trial of the task. Smith et al. found that age-related differences in PM performance (lower PM performance for older adults relative to young adults) persisted even when older adults could perform the ongoing task as well or better than the young adults. The current study investigates a possible explanation for the pattern of results reported by Smith et al. by including a manipulation of task emphasis: for half of the participants the prospective memory task was emphasize, while for the other half the ongoing color-matching task was emphasized. Older adults performed a 4-color version of the ongoing color-matching task, while young adults completed either the 4-color or a more difficult 6-color version of the ongoing task. Older adults failed to perform as well as the young adults on the prospective memory task regardless of task emphasis, even when older adults were performing as well or better than the young adults on the ongoing color-matching task. The current results indicate that the lack of an effect of ongoing task load on prospective memory task performance is not due to a perception that one or the other task is more important than the other.


Subject(s)
Aging/psychology , Executive Function , Memory , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Psychological Tests , Reaction Time , Recognition, Psychology , Task Performance and Analysis , Time Factors , Young Adult
7.
J Mem Lang ; 75: 45-57, 2014 Aug 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26034343

ABSTRACT

Distinctive processing is a concept designed to account for precision in memory, both correct responses and avoidance of errors. The principal question addressed in two experiments is how distinctive processing of studied material reduces false alarms to familiar distractors. Jacoby (Jacoby, Kelley, & McElree, 1999) has used the metaphors early selection and late correction to describe two different types of control processes. Early selection refers to limitations on access whereas late correction describes controlled monitoring of accessed information. The two types of processes are not mutually exclusive, and previous research has provided evidence for the operation of both. The data reported here extend previous work to a criterial recollection paradigm and to a recognition memory test. The results of both experiments show that variables that reduce false memory for highly familiar distracters continue to exert their effect under conditions of minimal post-access monitoring. Level of monitoring was reduced in the first experiment through test instructions and in the second experiment through speeded test responding. The results were consistent with the conclusion that both early selection and late correction operate to control accuracy in memory.

8.
J Mem Lang ; 65(4): 378-389, 2011 Nov 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22003267

ABSTRACT

False memories arising from associatively related lists are a robust phenomenon that resists many efforts to prevent it. However, a few variables have been shown to reduce this form of false memory. Explanations for how the reduction is accomplished have focused on either output monitoring processes or constraints on access, but neither idea alone is sufficient to explain extant data. Our research was driven by a framework that distinguishes item-based and event-based distinctive processing to account for the effects of different variables on both correct recall of study list items and false recall. We report the results of three experiments examining the effect of a deep orienting task and the effect of visual presentation of study items, both of which have been shown to reduce false recall. The experiments replicate those previous findings and add important new information about the effect of the variables on a recall test that eliminates the need for monitoring. The results clearly indicate that both post-access monitoring and constraints on access contribute to reductions in false memories. The results also showed that the manipulations of study modality and orienting task had different effects on correct and false recall, a pattern that was predicted by the item-based/event-based distinctive processing framework.

9.
Psychon Bull Rev ; 17(2): 206-12, 2010 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20382921

ABSTRACT

Psychological change is difficult to assess, in part because self-reported beliefs and attitudes may be biased or distorted. The present study probed belief change, in an educational context, by using the hindsight bias to counter another bias that generally plagues assessment of subjective change. Although research has indicated that skepticism courses reduce paranormal beliefs, those findings may reflect demand characteristics (biases toward desired, skeptical responses). Our hindsight-bias procedure circumvented demand by asking students, following semester-long skepticism (and control) courses, to recall their precourse levels of paranormal belief. People typically remember themselves as previously thinking, believing, and acting as they do now, so current skepticism should provoke false recollections of previous skepticism. Given true belief change, therefore, skepticism students should have remembered themselves as having been more skeptical than they were. They did, at least about paranormal topics that were covered most extensively in the course. Our findings thus show hindsight to be useful in evaluating cognitive change beyond demand characteristics.


Subject(s)
Cognition , Culture , Parapsychology , Prejudice , Attitude , Educational Status , Humans
10.
Memory ; 17(1): 49-53, 2009 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19101843

ABSTRACT

The isolation paradigm is a staple in the study of distinctiveness and memory. Isolated items are better remembered than non-isolated controls, and the standard interpretation of this effect is that subjective experience of salience recruits extraordinary processing to the isolated item. This interpretation is at odds with data showing an isolation effect when the isolate is not perceived as salient (e.g., von Restorff, 1933). All available research on the early isolation effect has tested memory after a relatively short retention interval. Perhaps the effect of salience on memory in the isolation paradigm would be revealed following longer retention intervals. The experiment reported here examines the effect of isolation following a 48-hour retention interval when the isolate evokes an experience of salience compared to when the isolate does not evoke that reaction. The isolation effect was substantial after the 48-hour delay but equally so for early and late isolation. Salience appears to have nothing to do with the memory processes even at the longer retention intervals.


Subject(s)
Mental Recall/physiology , Perception/physiology , Retention, Psychology/physiology , Humans , Statistics as Topic , Time Factors
11.
Mem Cognit ; 36(8): 1439-49, 2008 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19015503

ABSTRACT

A number of previous studies have shown that false recognition of critical items in the Deese/Roediger-McDermott paradigm is reduced when study items are presented visually rather than auditorily; however, this effect has not been uniformly demonstrated. We investigated three potential boundary conditions of the effect of study modality in false recognition. Experiments 1 and 2 showed no reduction in false recognition following visual study presentation when the yes-no recognition test was not preceded by a recall test. Experiment 3 showed that visual study presentation can reduce false recognition without a preceding recall test, if the recognition test uses remember-know instructions. The order of the recognition test items did not influence the effect of visual study presentation on false recognition in Experiment 1. In general, the data imply that distinctive processing at study can reduce false memory in recognition if the test demands draw attention to the dimension of distinctive processing.


Subject(s)
Recognition, Psychology , Repression, Psychology , Humans , Memory , Visual Perception
12.
Mem Cognit ; 35(5): 999-1006, 2007 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17910183

ABSTRACT

Normal processes of comprehension frequently yield false memories as an unwanted by-product. The simple paradigm now known as the Deese/Roediger-McDermott (DRM) paradigm takes advantage of this fact and has been used to reliably produce false memory for laboratory study. Among the findings from past research is the difficulty of preventing false memories in this paradigm. The purpose of the present experiments was to examine the effectiveness of feedback in correcting false memories. Two experiments were conducted, in which participants recalled DRM lists and either received feedback on their performance or did not. A subsequent recall test was administered to assess the effect of feedback. The results showed promising effects of feedback: Feedback enhanced both error correction and the propagation of correct recall. The data replicated other data of studies that have shown substantial error perseveration following feedback. These data also provide new information on the occurrence of errors following feedback. The results are discussed in terms of the activation-monitoring theory of false memory.


Subject(s)
Cognition , Feedback , Repression, Psychology , Humans , Mental Recall , Reaction Time , Vocabulary
13.
J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn ; 33(4): 734-46, 2007 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17576150

ABSTRACT

Evidence has begun to accumulate showing that successful performance of event-based prospective memory (PM) comes at a cost to other ongoing activities. The current study builds on previous work by examining the cost associated with PM when the target event is salient. Target salience is among the criteria for automatic retrieval of intentions according to the multiprocess view of PM. An alternative theory, the preparatory attentional and memory processes theory, argues that PM performance, including retrieval of the intent, is never automatic and successful performance always will come at a cost to other ongoing activity. The 4 experiments reported here used a salient PM target event. In addition, Experiments 3 and 4 were designed to meet the stringent criteria proposed for automatic retrieval of intentions by multiprocess theory, and, yet, in all 4 experiments, delayed intentions interfered with ongoing task performance.


Subject(s)
Life Change Events , Memory , Humans , Reaction Time , Vocabulary
14.
J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn ; 32(2): 249-58, 2006 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16569144

ABSTRACT

Prominent views of implicit priming agree that repetition of category exemplars should increase the probability of the exemplar coming to mind on a category production test. This prediction has been borne out in the data of numerous experiments that have used relatively high-frequency exemplars, but experiments that have used lower frequency exemplars have reported reduced or no priming on category production tests. Frameworks of memory disagree on why frequency would affect priming. The authors report 3 experiments, the first of which shows no priming of low-frequency exemplars under circumstances that yield priming of higher frequency instances. The second 2 experiments show that low-frequency instances can be primed, but the prior experience must bias the comprehension of the category label, not the exemplar.


Subject(s)
Attention/physiology , Memory/physiology , Adolescent , Choice Behavior/physiology , Female , Humans , Inhibition, Psychological , Male , Neuropsychological Tests/statistics & numerical data , Paired-Associate Learning/physiology , Semantics , Verbal Learning/physiology , Word Association Tests
15.
Psychol Sci ; 16(5): 358-61, 2005 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15869693

ABSTRACT

Research on skilled memory has focused on organizational processes to the exclusion of item-specific processes, although theories of skilled memory do acknowledge the importance of both kinds of processes. Using the isolation methodology, we presented lists of American football team names to participants who had either a high or a low level of knowledge about American football. An isolation effect (greater recall of the target in the isolate list than in a homogeneous control list) was observed only with high-knowledge participants. When standard lists were used, an isolation effect was observed with both groups. These findings empirically validate the importance of both organizational and item-specific processing as the basis of distinctive processing underlying skilled memory performance.


Subject(s)
Cognition , Memory , Humans , Mental Recall
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