University of Western Australia, Crawley, Western Australia, Australia.
Mem Cognit. 2010 Dec;38(8):1087-100. doi: 10.3758/MC.38.8.1087.
Information that initially is presumed to be correct, but that is later retracted or corrected, often continues to influence memory and reasoning. This occurs even if the retraction itself is well remembered. The present study investigated whether the continued influence of misinformation can be reduced by explicitly warning people at the outset that they may be misled. A specific warning--giving detailed information about the continued influence effect (CIE)--succeeded in reducing the continued reliance on outdated information but did not eliminate it. A more general warning--reminding people that facts are not always properly checked before information is disseminated--was even less effective. In an additional experiment, a specific warning was combined with the provision of a plausible alternative explanation for the retracted information. This combined manipulation further reduced the CIE but still failed to eliminate it altogether.
最初被认为是正确的信息,但后来被撤回或更正,往往会继续影响记忆和推理。即使对撤回本身的记忆很好,也会发生这种情况。本研究调查了通过在一开始就明确警告人们他们可能会被误导,是否可以减少错误信息的持续影响。一个具体的警告——详细说明持续影响效应(CIE)的信息——成功地减少了对过时信息的持续依赖,但并没有完全消除。一个更一般的警告——提醒人们在信息传播之前,事实并不总是经过正确检查——效果更差。在另一个实验中,具体的警告与对撤回信息的合理替代解释的提供相结合。这种组合操作进一步减少了 CIE,但仍未能完全消除。