Abraham Damon, McRae Kateri, Mangels Jennifer A
Department of Psychology, University of Denver, Denver, CO, United States.
Department of Psychology, Baruch College and The Graduate Center, The City University of New York, New York, NY, United States.
Front Psychol. 2019 Jun 21;10:1179. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01179. eCollection 2019.
Previous research has shown that the prospect of attaining a reward can promote task-engagement, up-regulate attention toward reward-relevant information, and facilitate enhanced encoding of new information into declarative memory. However, past research on reward-based enhancement of declarative memory has focused primarily on paradigms in which rewards are contingent upon accurate responses. Yet, findings from test-enhanced learning show that making errors can also be useful for learning if those errors represent effortful retrieval attempts and are followed by corrective feedback. Here, we used a challenging general knowledge task to examine the effects of explicitly rewarding retrieval effort, defined as a semantically plausible answer to a question (referenced to a semantic knowledge database www.mangelslab.org/bknorms), regardless of response accuracy. In particular, we asked whether intermittent rewards following effortful incorrect responses facilitated learning from corrective feedback as measured by incidental learning outcomes on a 24-48 h delayed retest. Given that effort-contingent extrinsic rewards represent the intersection between an internal locus of control and competency, we compared participants in this "Effort" group to three other groups in a between-subjects design: a Luck group that framed rewards as related to participant-chosen lottery numbers (reward with internal control, not competence-based), a random Award group that framed rewards as computer generated (no control, not competence-based), and a Control group with no reward, but matched on all other task features. Both men and women in the Effort group showed increased self-reports of concentration and positive feelings following the receipt of rewards, as well as subjective effort on the retest, compared to the Control group. However, only women additionally exhibited performance benefits of effort framing on error correction. These benefits were found for both rewarded and non-rewarded trials, but only for correction of low confidence errors, suggesting that effort-contingent rewards produced task-level changes in motivation to learn less familiar information in women, rather than trial-level influences in encoding or consolidation. The Luck and Award groups did not demonstrate significant motivational or behavioral benefits for either gender. These results suggest that both reward context and gender are important factors contributing to the effectiveness of rewards as tools to enhance learning from errors.
先前的研究表明,获得奖励的前景可以促进任务参与度,上调对与奖励相关信息的注意力,并有助于将新信息更好地编码到陈述性记忆中。然而,过去关于基于奖励增强陈述性记忆的研究主要集中在奖励取决于准确反应的范式上。然而,测试增强学习的研究结果表明,如果错误代表了努力的检索尝试并伴有纠正反馈,那么犯错对学习也可能是有用的。在此,我们使用了一项具有挑战性的常识任务,来检验明确奖励检索努力(定义为对问题的语义合理答案,参考语义知识数据库www.mangelslab.org/bknorms)的效果,而不考虑回答的准确性。具体而言,我们询问了在经过努力得到错误答案后给予间歇性奖励,是否能促进从纠正反馈中学习,这通过24 - 48小时延迟重测中的附带学习结果来衡量。鉴于基于努力的外在奖励代表了内部控制点和能力之间的交叉点,我们在一项被试间设计中将这个“努力”组的参与者与其他三组进行了比较:一个“运气”组,将奖励设定为与参与者选择的彩票号码相关(基于内部控制的奖励,而非基于能力);一个随机“奖励”组,将奖励设定为由计算机生成(无控制,非基于能力);以及一个无奖励的“控制”组,但在所有其他任务特征上进行了匹配。与控制组相比,努力组的男性和女性在获得奖励后,自我报告的注意力集中程度和积极情绪有所增加,重测时的主观努力也有所增加。然而,只有女性在错误纠正方面额外表现出努力框架带来的成绩提升。这些好处在有奖励和无奖励的试验中都有发现,但仅针对低信心错误的纠正,这表明基于努力的奖励在女性中产生了任务层面的学习动机变化,促使她们学习不太熟悉的信息,而不是在编码或巩固过程中的试验层面影响。运气组和奖励组在两性中均未表现出显著的动机或行为益处。这些结果表明,奖励背景和性别都是影响奖励作为从错误中增强学习工具有效性的重要因素。