Browning Catherine A, Harris Celia B, Van Bergen Penny, Barnier Amanda J, Rendell Peter G
a ARC Centre of Excellence in Cognition and its Disorders , Sydney , Australia.
b Department of Cognitive Science , Macquarie University , Sydney , Australia.
Memory. 2018 Oct;26(9):1206-1219. doi: 10.1080/09658211.2018.1433215. Epub 2018 Feb 1.
To perform prospective memory (PM) tasks in day-to-day life, we often enlist the help of others. Yet the effects of collaboration on PM are largely unknown. Adopting the methodology of the "collaborative recall paradigm", we tested whether stranger dyads (Experiment 1) and intimate couples (Experiment 2) would perform better on a "Virtual Week" task when working together or each working separately. In Experiment 1, we found evidence of collaborative inhibition: collaborating strangers did not perform to their pooled individual potential, although the effect was modulated by PM task difficulty. We also found that the overall collaborative inhibition effect was attributable to both the retrospective and prospective components of PM. In Experiment 2 however, there was no collaborative inhibition: there was no significant difference in performance between couples working together or separately. Our findings suggest potential costs of collaboration to PM. Intimate relationships may reduce the usual costs of collaboration, with implications for intervention training programmes and for populations who most need PM support.
为了在日常生活中执行前瞻记忆(PM)任务,我们常常寻求他人的帮助。然而,合作对前瞻记忆的影响在很大程度上尚不清楚。采用“协作回忆范式”的方法,我们测试了陌生二人组(实验1)和亲密伴侣(实验2)在共同完成或各自单独完成“虚拟一周”任务时,是否会表现得更好。在实验1中,我们发现了协作抑制的证据:合作的陌生人并没有发挥出他们个体潜力的总和,尽管这种效应受到前瞻记忆任务难度的调节。我们还发现,整体的协作抑制效应归因于前瞻记忆的回顾性和前瞻性成分。然而,在实验2中,没有协作抑制:共同工作或单独工作的伴侣之间在表现上没有显著差异。我们的研究结果表明合作对前瞻记忆可能存在成本。亲密关系可能会降低通常的合作成本,这对干预训练计划以及最需要前瞻记忆支持的人群具有启示意义。