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1.
Q J Exp Psychol (Hove) ; : 17470218231206813, 2023 Nov 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37787466

RESUMO

Learners may be uncertain about whether encountered information is true. Uncertainty may encourage people to critically assess information's accuracy, serving as a kind of desirable difficulty that benefits learning. Uncertainty may also have negative effects, however, leading people to mistrust true information or to later misremember false information as true. In three experiments, participants read history statements. In one condition, all statements were true, and the participants knew it. In the other two conditions, some statements were true, and others were false. Participants were either told the statements' accuracy or they guessed the statements' accuracy prior to feedback, a manipulation we refer to as truth-checking. All participants were then tested on recalling the true information and on recognising true versus false statements. We observed a significant benefit of truth-checking in one of the three experiments, suggesting that truth-checking may have some potential to enhance learning, perhaps by inducing people to encode to-be-learned information more deeply than they would otherwise. Even so, the benefit may come at a cost-truth-checking took significantly longer than study alone, and it led to a greater likelihood of thinking false information was true, suggesting costs of truth-checking may tend to outweigh benefits.

2.
Brain Res ; 1789: 147943, 2022 08 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35609625

RESUMO

Blind individuals commonly use verbal encoding (i.e. text-to-speech) and memory-based strategies (i.e. serial recall) for situations in which sighted individuals use vision (i.e. finding items). These strategies may serve to train cognitive systems responsible for maintaining and manipulating verbal information. To test this hypothesis, we investigate whether early visual deprivation is linked to improved verbal short-term and working memory abilities, and thus might illustrate experience-dependent plasticity in memory systems. We also test whether the sensory modality for encoding information influences performance. Our data show that blind adults recalled more items on a verbal short-term memory span task than sighted participants. Furthermore, blind individuals performed equally well on auditory forward and backward conditions despite the fact that recalling items in reverse order is more difficult for the general population. However, the benefits of recalling items in reverse order did not extend to the tactile domain, specifically, a braille version of the short-term memory digit span task in blind individuals. Furthermore, we observed no differences between blind and sighted individuals on a more demanding auditory n-back task evaluating more complex working memory processes. We conclude that the memory benefits associated with blindness might be restricted to auditory-verbal short-term memory and likely reflect strategy use and practice.


Assuntos
Cegueira , Visão Ocular , Adulto , Humanos , Memória de Curto Prazo , Rememoração Mental , Tato
3.
Exp Brain Res ; 240(3): 897-908, 2022 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35076724

RESUMO

Previous studies suggest that people who are congenitally blind outperform sighted people on some memory tasks. Whether blindness-associated memory advantages are specific to verbal materials or are also observed with nonverbal sounds has not been determined. Congenitally blind individuals (n = 20) and age and education matched blindfolded sighted controls (n = 22) performed a series of auditory memory tasks. These included: verbal forward and backward letter spans, a complex letter span with intervening equations, as well as two matched recognition tasks: one with verbal stimuli (i.e., letters) and one with nonverbal complex meaningless sounds. Replicating previously observed findings, blind participants outperformed sighted people on forward and backward letter span tasks. Blind participants also recalled more letters on the complex letter span task despite the interference of intervening equations. Critically, the same blind participants showed larger advantages on the verbal as compared to the nonverbal recognition task. These results suggest that blindness selectively enhances memory for verbal material. Possible explanations for blindness-related verbal memory advantages include blindness-induced memory practice and 'visual' cortex recruitment for verbal processing.


Assuntos
Cegueira , Córtex Visual , Cegueira/congênito , Humanos , Memória , Rememoração Mental , Reconhecimento Psicológico
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