de Bruïne Amy, Vel Tromp Myrthe, Koornneef Arnout, Brod Garvin, Jolles Dietsje
Department of Educational Science, Leiden University.
Department of Cognitive Psychology, Leiden University.
J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn. 2025 Jun;51(6):954-967. doi: 10.1037/xlm0001388. Epub 2024 Dec 12.
It has been demonstrated that surprising information often leads to better recall. Yet, this might not apply to information that is considered to be implausible. The present study examines how surprise and plausibility judgments relate to participants' memory for numerical statements. Participants performed an estimation task in which they were presented with an incomplete numerical fact (e.g., out of 10 bus drivers are women) for which they were asked to provide an estimation. After being presented with an answer, they indicated how surprised they were about the answer and whether they found the answer plausible. Next, participants performed a memory test to examine the effects of surprise and plausibility on recall of the presented answers. Finally, 24-48 hr later, participants provided new estimations for the numerical statements to examine whether participants had integrated the presented answer into their knowledge representation. A U-shaped relation between surprise and memory recall was found for recall on Day 1, with unsurprising and highly surprising items being remembered better than moderately surprising items. Importantly, the relationship between surprise and recall was only found for plausible items. Next, new estimations on Day 2 indicated that unsurprising and plausible items were incorporated into participants' knowledge representation more often than surprising and implausible items. Taken together, our findings support the notion that surprise enhances memory but also show that metacognitive judgments influence this effect. Moreover, our findings revealed that enhanced recall does not necessarily mean the information is fully incorporated into participants' knowledge representation. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).
已有研究表明,令人惊讶的信息往往能带来更好的记忆效果。然而,这可能不适用于那些被认为不可信的信息。本研究考察了惊讶感和可信度判断与参与者对数字陈述的记忆之间的关系。参与者进行了一项估计任务,在该任务中,他们会看到一个不完整的数字事实(例如,10名公交车司机中有 名是女性),并被要求给出一个估计值。在看到答案后,他们要表明对答案的惊讶程度以及是否认为答案可信。接下来,参与者进行了一项记忆测试,以考察惊讶感和可信度对所呈现答案记忆的影响。最后,在24 - 48小时后,参与者对这些数字陈述提供新的估计值,以检验参与者是否已将所呈现的答案整合到他们的知识表征中。在第一天的记忆测试中,发现惊讶感与记忆回忆之间呈U形关系,即不太令人惊讶和非常令人惊讶的项目比中度令人惊讶的项目记忆得更好。重要的是,惊讶感与回忆之间的关系仅在可信项目中被发现。其次,第二天的新估计表明,不太令人惊讶且可信的项目比令人惊讶且不可信的项目更常被整合到参与者的知识表征中。综合来看,我们的研究结果支持了惊讶感能增强记忆这一观点,但也表明元认知判断会影响这种效果。此外,我们的研究结果还表明,记忆增强并不一定意味着信息已完全整合到参与者的知识表征中。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c)2025美国心理学会,保留所有权利)