Eskritt Michelle, Ma Sierra
Department of Psychology, Mount St. Vincent University, 166 Bedford Highway, Halifax, NS, B3M 2J6, Canada,
Mem Cognit. 2014 Feb;42(2):237-46. doi: 10.3758/s13421-013-0362-1.
In the present study, we examined whether note-taking as a memory aid may provide a naturalistic example of intentional forgetting. In the first experiment, participants played Concentration, a memory card game in which the identity and location of pairs of cards need to be remembered. Before the game started, half of the participants were allowed to study the cards, and the other half made notes that were then unexpectedly taken away. No significant differences emerged between the two groups for remembering identity information, but the study group remembered significantly more location information than did the note-taking group. In a second experiment, we examined whether note-takers would show signs of proactive interference while playing Concentration repeatedly. The results indicated that they did not. The findings suggest that participants adopted an intentional-forgetting strategy when using notes to store certain types of information.
在本研究中,我们考察了记笔记作为一种记忆辅助手段是否能提供一个有意遗忘的自然主义范例。在第一个实验中,参与者玩了一种记忆纸牌游戏“集中注意力”,在这个游戏中需要记住成对纸牌的身份和位置。在游戏开始前,一半的参与者被允许研究纸牌,另一半则做笔记,然后笔记被意外拿走。两组在记忆身份信息方面没有显著差异,但研究组记住的位置信息比记笔记组显著更多。在第二个实验中,我们考察了记笔记的人在反复玩“集中注意力”游戏时是否会表现出前摄干扰的迹象。结果表明他们没有。这些发现表明,参与者在使用笔记存储某些类型的信息时采用了有意遗忘策略。