French Lauren, Garry Maryanne, Mori Kazuo
Curtin University, Perth, Western Australia.
Acta Psychol (Amst). 2011 Jan;136(1):119-28. doi: 10.1016/j.actpsy.2010.10.009. Epub 2010 Nov 26.
People remember different details about the same events, and when they discuss events they exchange new - and misleading - information. Discussion can change memory, especially when the source of new information is highly credible. But we do not know whether the effects of credibility are based on absolute judgments - judging a source's credibility independently from our own credibility - or relative judgments - judging a source's credibility only in relation to our own credibility. We addressed this question by manipulating subjects' expectations, leading them to believe that they either had the same, higher or lower "visual acuity" than their partner while they watched a movie together. To create ample opportunities for the pairs to mention misleading details to one another, each member unknowingly saw a different version of the movie. The pairs then discussed some of the critical differences, but not others. Later, everyone took an independent recognition test. Subjects' susceptibility to misinformation depended on their own credibility relative to their partner's, supporting the idea that susceptibility to misinformation depends on relative differences in credibility.
人们对同一事件会记住不同的细节,并且在讨论事件时,他们会交流新的且具有误导性的信息。讨论能够改变记忆,尤其是当新信息的来源极具可信度时。但我们并不清楚可信度的影响是基于绝对判断——独立于我们自身的可信度来判断信息源的可信度——还是基于相对判断——仅相对于我们自身的可信度来判断信息源的可信度。我们通过操纵受试者的预期来解决这个问题,引导他们在一起观看电影时相信自己的“视力”与同伴相同、更高或更低。为了给两人提供充足的机会相互提及误导性细节,每个成员都在不知情的情况下观看了电影的不同版本。然后两人讨论了一些关键差异,但不是全部。之后,每个人都进行了独立的识别测试。受试者对错误信息的易感性取决于他们相对于同伴的自身可信度,这支持了对错误信息的易感性取决于可信度的相对差异这一观点。