Everyday Amnesia: Residual Memory for High Confidence Misses and Implications for Decision Models of Recognition

Despite studying a list of items only minutes earlier, when reencountered in a recognition memory test, undergraduate participants often say with total confidence that they have not studied some of the items before. Such high confidence miss (HCM) responses have been taken as evidence of rapid and c...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of experimental psychology. General 2024-07, Vol.153 (7), p.1790-1815
Hauptverfasser: Berry, Christopher J., Shanks, David R.
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Shanks, David R.
description Despite studying a list of items only minutes earlier, when reencountered in a recognition memory test, undergraduate participants often say with total confidence that they have not studied some of the items before. Such high confidence miss (HCM) responses have been taken as evidence of rapid and complete forgetting and of everyday amnesia (Roediger & Tekin, 2020). We investigated (a) if memory for HCMs is completely lost or whether a residual memory effect exists and (b) whether dominant decision models predict the effect. Participants studied faces (Experiments 1a, 2, and 3) or words (Experiment 1b), then completed a single-item recognition memory task, followed by either (a) a two-alternative forced-choice recognition task, in which the studied and nonstudied alternatives on each trial were matched for their previous old/new decision and confidence rating (Experiments 1 and 2) or (b) a second single-item recognition task in which the targets and foils were HCMs and high confidence correct rejections, respectively (Experiment 3). In each experiment, participants reliably distinguished HCMs from high-confidence correct rejections. The unequal variance signal detection and dual-process signal detection models were fit to the single-item recognition data, and the parameter estimates were used to predict the memory effect for HCMs. The dual-process signal detection model predicted the residual memory effect (as did another popular model, the mixture signal detection theory model). However, the unequal variance signal detection model incorrectly predicted a negative, or no, effect, invalidating this model. The residual memory effect for HCMs demonstrates that everyday amnesia is not associated with complete memory loss and distinguishes between decision models. Public Significance StatementParticipants in our experiments appeared to completely forget studying particular items (pictures of faces or words) over short intervals in tests of recognition memory-thereby showing everyday amnesia. However, memory for such items was evident in a follow-up memory test. This suggests that the memory loss that occurs in everyday amnesia is not complete and also has implications for formal decision models of recognition.
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Such high confidence miss (HCM) responses have been taken as evidence of rapid and complete forgetting and of everyday amnesia (Roediger &amp; Tekin, 2020). We investigated (a) if memory for HCMs is completely lost or whether a residual memory effect exists and (b) whether dominant decision models predict the effect. Participants studied faces (Experiments 1a, 2, and 3) or words (Experiment 1b), then completed a single-item recognition memory task, followed by either (a) a two-alternative forced-choice recognition task, in which the studied and nonstudied alternatives on each trial were matched for their previous old/new decision and confidence rating (Experiments 1 and 2) or (b) a second single-item recognition task in which the targets and foils were HCMs and high confidence correct rejections, respectively (Experiment 3). In each experiment, participants reliably distinguished HCMs from high-confidence correct rejections. The unequal variance signal detection and dual-process signal detection models were fit to the single-item recognition data, and the parameter estimates were used to predict the memory effect for HCMs. The dual-process signal detection model predicted the residual memory effect (as did another popular model, the mixture signal detection theory model). However, the unequal variance signal detection model incorrectly predicted a negative, or no, effect, invalidating this model. The residual memory effect for HCMs demonstrates that everyday amnesia is not associated with complete memory loss and distinguishes between decision models. Public Significance StatementParticipants in our experiments appeared to completely forget studying particular items (pictures of faces or words) over short intervals in tests of recognition memory-thereby showing everyday amnesia. However, memory for such items was evident in a follow-up memory test. 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However, the unequal variance signal detection model incorrectly predicted a negative, or no, effect, invalidating this model. The residual memory effect for HCMs demonstrates that everyday amnesia is not associated with complete memory loss and distinguishes between decision models. Public Significance StatementParticipants in our experiments appeared to completely forget studying particular items (pictures of faces or words) over short intervals in tests of recognition memory-thereby showing everyday amnesia. However, memory for such items was evident in a follow-up memory test. 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Such high confidence miss (HCM) responses have been taken as evidence of rapid and complete forgetting and of everyday amnesia (Roediger &amp; Tekin, 2020). We investigated (a) if memory for HCMs is completely lost or whether a residual memory effect exists and (b) whether dominant decision models predict the effect. Participants studied faces (Experiments 1a, 2, and 3) or words (Experiment 1b), then completed a single-item recognition memory task, followed by either (a) a two-alternative forced-choice recognition task, in which the studied and nonstudied alternatives on each trial were matched for their previous old/new decision and confidence rating (Experiments 1 and 2) or (b) a second single-item recognition task in which the targets and foils were HCMs and high confidence correct rejections, respectively (Experiment 3). In each experiment, participants reliably distinguished HCMs from high-confidence correct rejections. The unequal variance signal detection and dual-process signal detection models were fit to the single-item recognition data, and the parameter estimates were used to predict the memory effect for HCMs. The dual-process signal detection model predicted the residual memory effect (as did another popular model, the mixture signal detection theory model). However, the unequal variance signal detection model incorrectly predicted a negative, or no, effect, invalidating this model. The residual memory effect for HCMs demonstrates that everyday amnesia is not associated with complete memory loss and distinguishes between decision models. Public Significance StatementParticipants in our experiments appeared to completely forget studying particular items (pictures of faces or words) over short intervals in tests of recognition memory-thereby showing everyday amnesia. However, memory for such items was evident in a follow-up memory test. 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subjects Adult
Amnesia
Amnesia - physiopathology
Amnesia - psychology
Decision Making
Decision Making - physiology
Experimental psychology
Facial Recognition - physiology
Female
Forgetting
Human
Humans
Male
Memory
Models, Psychological
Recognition
Recognition (Learning)
Recognition, Psychology - physiology
Self-Confidence
Signal Detection (Perception)
Young Adult
title Everyday Amnesia: Residual Memory for High Confidence Misses and Implications for Decision Models of Recognition
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