Department of Psychology, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK.
Memory. 2010 May;18(4):451-7. doi: 10.1080/09658211003742706. Epub 2010 Apr 19.
When we see a stranger's face we quickly form impressions of his or her personality, and expectations of how the stranger might behave. Might these intuitive character judgements bias source monitoring? Participants read headlines "reported" by a trustworthy- and an untrustworthy-looking reporter. Subsequently, participants recalled which reporter provided each headline. Source memory for likely-sounding headlines was most accurate when a trustworthy-looking reporter had provided the headlines. Conversely, source memory for unlikely-sounding headlines was most accurate when an untrustworthy-looking reporter had provided the headlines. This bias appeared to be driven by the use of decision criteria during retrieval rather than differences in memory encoding. Nevertheless, the bias was apparently unrelated to variations in subjective confidence. These results show for the first time that intuitive, stereotyped judgements of others' appearance can bias memory attributions analogously to the biases that occur when people receive explicit information to distinguish sources. We suggest possible real-life consequences of these stereotype-driven source-monitoring biases.
当我们看到陌生人的脸时,我们会迅速对他或她的个性形成印象,并对陌生人的行为方式产生预期。这些直观的性格判断是否会影响来源监测?参与者阅读了由一个可信赖和一个不可信的记者“报道”的标题。随后,参与者回忆起哪个记者提供了每个标题。当一个看起来可信赖的记者提供了标题时,对听起来合理的标题的来源记忆最为准确。相反,当一个看起来不可信的记者提供了标题时,对听起来不太可能的标题的来源记忆最为准确。这种偏差似乎是由检索过程中使用的决策标准驱动的,而不是记忆编码的差异。然而,这种偏差显然与主观置信度的变化无关。这些结果首次表明,对他人外貌的直观、刻板的判断可以类似于人们收到明确信息以区分来源时出现的偏差来影响记忆归因。我们提出了这些由刻板印象驱动的来源监测偏差可能产生的现实生活后果。