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Related Experiment Videos

Seeing double: levels of processing can cause false memory.

Antonia Kronlund1, Bruce W A Whittlesea

  • 1Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia.

Canadian Journal of Experimental Psychology = Revue Canadienne De Psychologie Experimentale
|April 19, 2005
PubMed
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Deeper memory processing improves recall for repeated items but can create false memories for single items. This suggests remembering involves inference, not just retrieval.

Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Memory Studies
  • Human Cognition

Background:

  • Deeper levels of processing typically enhance memory accuracy.
  • The standard levels-of-processing paradigm explores encoding depth's effect on recall.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate how processing depth interacts with item repetition frequency in memory.
  • To examine the impact of semantic, phonemic, and graphemic encoding on frequency judgments.

Main Methods:

  • Modified levels-of-processing procedure with items presented once or twice.
  • Encoding involved semantic, phonemic, or graphemic questions.
  • Participants judged the frequency of word occurrence during the study phase.

Main Results:

Related Experiment Videos

  • Deeper processing improved accuracy for twice-presented items.
  • Deeper processing induced an illusion of repetition for once-presented items.
  • Encoding depth influenced frequency judgment accuracy and error patterns.

Conclusions:

  • Memory recall is not solely retrieval but involves evaluation and inference.
  • Processing depth can lead to both accurate memory and memory illusions.
  • The study highlights the reconstructive nature of memory.