Umanath Sharda, Dolan Patrick O, Marsh Elizabeth J
a Department of Psychology & Neuroscience , Duke University , Durham , NC , USA.
Memory. 2014;22(5):481-92. doi: 10.1080/09658211.2013.799701. Epub 2013 May 24.
Many people respond "two" to the question "How many animals of each kind did Moses take on the ark?", even though they know the reference should be to Noah. The Moses Illusion demonstrates a failure to apply stored knowledge (Erickson & Mattson, 1981). Of interest was whether older adults' robust knowledge bases would protect them from vulnerability to this illusion. Of secondary interest were any age differences in the memorial consequences of the illusion, and whether older adults' prior knowledge would protect them from later reproducing information from distorted questions (e.g., later saying that Moses took two animals of each kind on the ark). Surprisingly, older adults fell for the Moses Illusion more often than did younger adults. However, falling for the illusion did not affect older adults' later memory; they were less suggestible than young adults. Most importantly, older adults were more likely to recover from exposure to distorted questions and respond correctly. Explanations of these findings, drawing on theories of cognitive ageing, are discussed.
对于“摩西每种动物带了多少只上方舟?”这个问题,很多人回答“两只”,尽管他们知道这里指的应该是诺亚。摩西错觉表明人们未能运用已存储的知识(埃里克森和马特森,1981)。有趣的是,年长者丰富的知识库是否能使他们免受这种错觉的影响。其次感兴趣的是错觉在记忆方面的年龄差异,以及年长者的先验知识是否能保护他们在之后不会根据扭曲的问题再现信息(例如,之后说摩西每种动物带了两只上方舟)。令人惊讶的是,年长者比年轻人更容易陷入摩西错觉。然而,陷入错觉并不影响年长者之后的记忆;他们比年轻人更不易受暗示。最重要的是,年长者在接触扭曲问题后更有可能恢复并正确作答。本文讨论了基于认知老化理论对这些发现的解释。