journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38443518/language-and-autobiographical-memory-development-from-5-to-12-years-a-longitudinal-perspective
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Llanos Merín, Alonso Mateo, Marta Nieto, Laura Ros, José Miguel Latorre
The main aim of this study, with two repeated measurements, was to analyze the development of autobiographical memory in a sample of 78 Spanish participants at ages 5 (Time 1; M = 62.43 months, range: 50-74 months) and 12 (Time 2; M = 142.71 months, range: 132-155 months). Data were collected on autobiographical memory and verbal functions. We analyzed the relation between language and autobiographical memory specificity from a longitudinal perspective and assessed the indirect effect of vocabulary in the relationship between age and specific memory at both temporal moments...
March 5, 2024: Memory & Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38436908/impact-of-process-interference-on-memory-encoding-and-retrieval-processes-in-dual-task-situations
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sandra Hensen, Iring Koch, Patricia Hirsch
Dual-tasks at the memory encoding stage have been shown to decrease recall performance and impair concurrent task performance. In contrast, studies on the effect of dual-tasks at the memory retrieval stage observed mixed results. Which cognitive mechanisms are underlying this dual-task interference is still an unresolved question. In the present study, we investigated the influence of a concurrent reaction-time task on the performance in a long-term memory task in two experiments. In Experiment 1, participants performed an auditory-verbal free recall memory task and a visual-manual spatial Stroop task in a single or dual-task condition, either at the encoding or retrieval stage of the memory task...
March 4, 2024: Memory & Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38411779/meta-memory-prediction-of-specific-autobiographical-recall-an-experimental-approach-using-a-modified-autobiographical-memory-test
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Noboru Matsumoto
Autobiographical memory specificity is known to contribute to better mental health, social problem-solving, and episodic future thinking. While numerous studies have addressed variables that affect autobiographical memory specificity, little is known regarding the meta-memory processes that underpin memory retrieval. In this study, we introduced two meta-memory constructs, ease of retrieval judgments and anticipation of negative emotion evoked, which potentially affect autobiographical memory specificity. Participants (N = 109) first rated the ease of retrieval and anticipated emotions for positive and negative words used in a subsequent autobiographical memory test...
February 27, 2024: Memory & Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38393534/the-effect-of-noninstrumental-information-on-reward-learning
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jake R Embrey, Amy X Li, Shi Xian Liew, Ben R Newell
Investigations of information-seeking often highlight people's tendency to forgo financial reward in return for advance information about future outcomes. Most of these experiments use tasks in which reward contingencies are described to participants. The use of such descriptions leaves open the question of whether the opportunity to obtain such noninstrumental information influences people's ability to learn and represent the underlying reward structure of an experimental environment. In two experiments, participants completed a two-armed bandit task with monetary incentives where reward contingencies were learned via trial-by-trial experience...
February 23, 2024: Memory & Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38388779/voluntary-task-switching-is-affected-by-modality-compatibility-and-preparation
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Erik Friedgen, Iring Koch, Edita Poljac, Baptist Liefooghe, Denise Nadine Stephan
Cognitive task control can be examined in task-switching studies. Performance costs in task switches are usually smaller with compatible stimulus-response modality mappings (visual-manual and auditory-vocal) than with incompatible mappings (visual-vocal and auditory-manual). Modality compatibility describes the modality match of sensory input and of the anticipated response effect (e.g., vocal responses produce auditory effects, so that auditory stimuli are modality-compatible with vocal responses). Fintor et al...
February 22, 2024: Memory & Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38381314/intention-offloading-domain-general-versus-task-specific-confidence-signals
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Chhavi Sachdeva, Sam J Gilbert
Intention offloading refers to the use of external reminders to help remember delayed intentions (e.g., setting an alert to help you remember when you need to take your medication). Research has found that metacognitive processes influence offloading such that individual differences in confidence predict individual differences in offloading regardless of objective cognitive ability. The current study investigated the cross-domain organization of this relationship. Participants performed two perceptual discrimination tasks where objective accuracy was equalized using a staircase procedure...
February 21, 2024: Memory & Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38378883/does-value-based-prioritization-at-working-memory-enhance-long-term-memory
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
A L Atkinson, A H Waterman, R J Allen
Research has demonstrated that individuals can direct their attention to valuable information in both working memory and long-term memory tasks with observable effects on performance. However, it is currently unclear whether prioritising an item for a working memory task automatically translates into a boost at long-term memory. This was examined in two experiments using relatively short (250 ms per item; Experiment 1) and longer (500 ms per item; Experiment 2) encoding times. Participants first completed a visual working memory task, in which they were presented with series of photographs of everyday objects...
February 20, 2024: Memory & Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38376622/watching-videos-of-a-drawing-hand-improves-students-understanding-of-the-normal-probability-distribution
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Icy Yunyi Zhang, Xiaohan Hanna Guo, Ji Y Son, Idan A Blank, James W Stigler
Understanding normal probability distributions is a crucial objective in mathematics and statistics education. Drawing upon cognitive psychology research, this study explores the use of drawings and visualizations as effective scaffolds to enhance students' comprehension. Although much research has documented the helpfulness of drawing as a research tool to reveal students' knowledge states, its direct utility in advancing higher-order cognitive processes remains understudied. In Study 1, qualitative methods were utilized to identify common misunderstandings among students regarding canonical depictions of the normal probability distribution...
February 20, 2024: Memory & Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38353910/automatic-mental-simulation-in-native-and-non-native-speakers
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Samuel J A van Zuijlen, Sharon Singh, Kevin Gunawan, Diane Pecher, René Zeelenberg
Pictures of objects are verified faster when they match the implied orientation, shape, and color in a sentence-picture verification task, suggesting that people mentally simulate these features during language comprehension. Previous studies had an unintended correlation between match status and the required response, which may have influenced participants' responses by eliciting strategic use of this correlation. We removed this correlation by including color-matching filler trials and investigated if the color-match effect was still obtained...
February 14, 2024: Memory & Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38353909/exploring-the-metamnemonic-and-phenomenal-differences-between-transitional-and-mundane-events
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Liangzi Shi, Norman R Brown, P J Charles Reimer
In two experiments, we systematically investigated the reasons why people retained certain autobiographical events in their memory, as well as the properties of those events and their predicted memorability. The first experiment used three methods (word-cued, free-recalled, and "memorable, interesting, and/or important") to retrieve event memories, and examined memories from three different time-frames: very recent (within past 7 days), recent (past 2 weeks and 6 months), and older events (at least one year)...
February 12, 2024: Memory & Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38347259/uncovering-the-interplay-between-drawings-mental-representations-and-arithmetic-problem-solving-strategies-in-children-and-adults
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hippolyte Gros, Jean-Pierre Thibaut, Emmanuel Sander
There is an ongoing debate in the scientific community regarding the nature and role of the mental representations involved in solving arithmetic word problems. In this study, we took a closer look at the interplay between mental representations, drawing production, and strategy choice. We used dual-strategy isomorphic word problems sharing the same mathematical structure, but differing in the entities they mentioned in their problem statement. Due to the non-mathematical knowledge attached to these entities, some problems were believed to lead to a specific (cardinal) encoding compatible with one solving strategy, whereas other problems were thought to foster a different (ordinal) encoding compatible with the other solving strategy...
February 12, 2024: Memory & Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38347258/is-hey-jude-in-the-right-key-cognitive-components-of-absolute-pitch-memory
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stephen C Van Hedger, Andrea R Halpern, David J Vollweiler, Evan E Smith, Peter Q Pfordresher
Most individuals, regardless of formal musical training, have long-term absolute pitch memory (APM) for familiar musical recordings, though with varying levels of accuracy. The present study followed up on recent evidence suggesting an association between singing accuracy and APM (Halpern & Pfordresher, 2022, Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 84(1), 260-269), as well as tonal short-term memory (STM) and APM (Van Hedger et al., 2018, Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 71(4), 879-891)...
February 12, 2024: Memory & Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38361018/recognition-memory-decisions-made-with-short-and-long-term-retrieval
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Shuchun Lea Lai, Rui Cao, Richard M Shiffrin
In the present research, we produce a coherent account of the storage and retrieval processes in short- and long-term event memory, and long-term knowledge, that produce response accuracy and response time in a wide variety of conditions in our studies of recognition memory. Two to nine pictures are studied sequentially followed by a target or foil test picture in four conditions used in Nosofsky et al. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 47, 316-342, (2021) and in our new paradigm: VM: target and foil responses to a given stimulus change from trial to trial; CM: the responses do not change from trial to trial; AN: every trial uses new stimuli; MIXED: combinations of VM, CN, and AN occur on each trial...
February 9, 2024: Memory & Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38334870/visuospatial-memory-in-apraxia-exploring-quantitative-drawing-metrics-to-assess-the-representation-of-local-and-global-information
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sarah K Salo, Cathryn A Harries, M Jane Riddoch, Alastair D Smith
Neuropsychological evidence suggests that visuospatial memory is subserved by two separable processing systems, with dorsal underpinnings for global form and ventral underpinnings for the integration of part elements. Previous drawing studies have explored the effects of Gestalt organisation upon memory for hierarchical stimuli, and we here present an exploratory study of an apraxic dorsal stream patient's (MH) performance. We presented MH with a stimulus set (previously reported by Riddoch et al., Cognitive Neuropsychology, 20(7), 641-671, 2003) and devised a novel quantitative scoring system to obtain a finer grain of insight into performance...
February 9, 2024: Memory & Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38334869/children-s-representation-of-specialized-skilled-movements-the-cases-of-snowboarding-and-aikido
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Allegra Sosic, Sabrina Panesi, Sergio Morra
This article investigates children's graphic representation of two complex motor skills, snowboarding and aikido, from the perspective of drawing flexibility research. In particular, the role of working memory capacity in the development of drawing flexibility is examined. A total of 127 children in the age range 5.7-11.9 years were shown short videos of snowboarding and aikido and were required to make drawings of them. In addition, participants were administered Goodenough's Draw-a-man Test (that measures the ability to draw detail and proportion in the human figure) and two working memory tests (the Mr...
February 9, 2024: Memory & Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38321246/people-accept-breaks-in-the-causal-chain-between-crime-and-punishment
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Julia W Van de Vondervoort, Lyne Baaj, John Turri, Ori Friedman
Crime and punishment are usually connected. An agent intentionally causes harm, other people find out, and they punish the agent in response. We investigated whether people care about the integrity of this causal chain. Across seven experiments, participants (total N = 1,709) rated the acceptability of punishing agents for one crime when the agents had committed a different crime. Overall, participants generally approved of such wayward punishment. They endorsed it more strongly than punishing totally innocent agents, though they often approved of punishing agents for their correct crimes more strongly...
February 6, 2024: Memory & Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38315292/people-can-reliably-detect-action-changes-and-goal-changes-during-naturalistic-perception
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Xing Su, Khena M Swallow
As a part of ongoing perception, the human cognitive system segments others' activities into discrete episodes (event segmentation). Although prior research has shown that this process is likely related to changes in an actor's actions and goals, it has not yet been determined whether untrained observers can reliably identify action and goal changes as naturalistic activities unfold, or whether the changes they identify are tied to visual features of the activity (e.g., the beginnings and ends of object interactions)...
February 5, 2024: Memory & Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38308161/semantically-congruent-bimodal-presentation-modulates-cognitive-control-over-attentional-guidance-by-working-memory
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Biye Cai, Xiaoyu Tang, Aijun Wang, Ming Zhang
Although previous studies have well established that audiovisual enhancement has a promoting effect on working memory and selective attention, there remains an open question about the influence of audiovisual enhancement on attentional guidance by working memory. To address this issue, the present study adopted a dual-task paradigm that combines a working memory task and a visual search task, in which the content of working memory was presented in audiovisual or visual modalities. Given the importance of search speed in memory-driven attentional suppression, we divided participants into two groups based on their reaction time (RT) in neutral trials and examined whether audiovisual enhancement in attentional suppression was modulated by search speed...
February 2, 2024: Memory & Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38286945/unringing-the-bell-successful-debriefing-following-a-rich-false-memory-study
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ciara M Greene, Katie M Ryan, Lisa Ballantyne, Elizabeth Barrett, Conor S Cowman, Caroline A Dawson, Charlotte Huston, Julie Maher, Gillian Murphy
In rich false memory studies, familial informants often provide information to support researchers in planting vivid memories of events that never occurred. The goal of the current study was to assess how effectively we can retract these false memories via debriefing - i.e., to what extent can we put participants back the way we found them? We aimed to establish (1) what proportion of participants would retain a false memory or false belief following debriefing, and (2) whether richer, more detailed memories would be more difficult to retract...
January 29, 2024: Memory & Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38270777/understanding-patterns-of-accumulation-improving-forecast-based-decisions-via-nudging
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hatice Zülal Boz-Yılmaz, Aysecan Boduroglu
In this study we investigated challenges associated with comprehension of graphical patterns of accumulation (Experiment 1) and how to improve accumulation-based reasoning via nudging (Experiment 2). On each trial participants were presented with two separate graphs, each depicting a linear, saturating, or exponential data trajectory. They were then asked to make a binary decision based on their forecasts of how these trends would evolve. Correct responses were associated with a focus on the rate of increase in graphs; incorrect responses were driven by prior knowledge and beliefs regarding the context and/or selective attention towards the early phases of the line trajectories...
January 25, 2024: Memory & Cognition
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