Middlebrooks Catherine D, Murayama Kou, Castel Alan D
Department of Psychology, University of California, Los Angeles.
School of Psychology and Clinical Language Sciences, University of Reading.
J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn. 2017 Jun;43(6):972-985. doi: 10.1037/xlm0000360. Epub 2017 Jan 16.
Prior research suggests that learners study and remember information differently depending upon the type of test they expect to later receive. The current experiments investigate how testing expectations impact the study of and memory for valuable information. Participants studied lists of words ranging in value from 1 to 10 points with the goal being to maximize their score on a later memory test. Half of the participants were told to expect a recognition test after each list, whereas the other half were told to expect a recall test. After several lists of receiving tests congruent with expectations, participants studying for a recognition test instead received an unexpected recall test. In Experiment 1, participants who had studied for a recognition test recalled less of the valuable information than participants anticipating the recall format. These participants continued to attend less to item value on future (expected) recall tests than participants who had only ever experienced recall testing. When the recognition tests were made more demanding in Experiment 2, value-based recall improved relative to Experiment 1: though memory for the valuable information remained superior when participants studied with the expectation of having to recall the information, there were no longer significant differences after accounting for recall testing experience. Thus, recall-based testing encouraged strategic, value-based encoding and enhanced retrieval of important information, whereas recognition testing in some cases limited value-based study and memory. These results extend prior work concerning the impact of testing expectations on memory, offering further insight into how people study important information. (PsycINFO Database Record
先前的研究表明,学习者根据他们预期随后会接受的测试类型,对信息的学习和记忆方式有所不同。当前的实验研究了测试预期如何影响对有价值信息的学习和记忆。参与者学习了价值从1到10分不等的单词列表,目标是在随后的记忆测试中获得最高分。一半的参与者被告知每次列表学习后预期会有一个识别测试,而另一半则被告知预期会有一个回忆测试。在经历了几次与预期相符的测试后,准备识别测试的参与者意外地接受了一次回忆测试。在实验1中,准备识别测试的参与者比预期回忆测试形式的参与者回忆起的有价值信息更少。在未来(预期的)回忆测试中,这些参与者对项目价值的关注仍然少于只经历过回忆测试的参与者。在实验2中,当识别测试要求更高时,基于价值的回忆相对于实验1有所改善:尽管当参与者预期必须回忆信息而进行学习时,对有价值信息的记忆仍然更好,但在考虑回忆测试经验后,不再有显著差异。因此,基于回忆的测试鼓励策略性的、基于价值的编码,并增强对重要信息的检索,而识别测试在某些情况下限制了基于价值的学习和记忆。这些结果扩展了先前关于测试预期对记忆影响的研究工作,进一步深入了解了人们如何学习重要信息。(PsycINFO数据库记录)