Luo Xiaochun, Xiao Qian, Tang Weihai
Department of Student Affairs, Sichuan College of Architectural Technology, Chengdu 610399, China.
Faculty of Psychology, Tianjin Normal University, Tianjin 300387, China.
Behav Sci (Basel). 2025 Jul 3;15(7):905. doi: 10.3390/bs15070905.
The present study examined how making judgments of learning (JOLs) vs. not making judgments of learning (no-JOLs) influences item and sequential memory in collaborative contexts. According to the item-order hypothesis, making JOLs improves memory for specific items (i.e., item memory) but disrupts sequential memory where memory for temporal relationships between items is required. If JOLs do enhance item memory performance, the study predicts they may effectively eliminate collaborative inhibition through a compensatory enhancement mechanism. Specifically, the magnitude of JOL-induced memory improvement appears to be greater in collaborative groups than in nominal groups. This differential enhancement likely offsets the typical memory impairment caused by collaborative retrieval interference, resulting in statistically equivalent final performance between groups. Consequently, the collaborative inhibition effect may disappear under JOL conditions. This study employed a 2 (group: collaborative vs. nominal; between-subjects) × 2 (metamemory monitoring: with vs. without judgments of learning; within-subjects) × 2 (test type: recognition vs. sequential reconstruction; within-subjects) mixed factorial design. The findings indicated that making judgments of learning significantly enhanced item memory performance while having no noticeable effect on sequential memory. It suggests that the reactivity effect is only present in item memory. Additionally, it was found that both item recognition and sequential memory performance were lower in the collaborative group compared with the nominal group, highlighting the presence of collaborative inhibition. These results suggest that the reactivity effect and collaborative inhibition are two distinct memory phenomena that do not affect each other.
本研究考察了在合作情境中进行学习判断(JOLs)与不进行学习判断(无JOLs)如何影响项目记忆和序列记忆。根据项目顺序假说,进行JOLs能提高对特定项目的记忆(即项目记忆),但会干扰需要对项目间时间关系进行记忆的序列记忆。如果JOLs确实能提高项目记忆表现,该研究预测它们可能通过一种补偿增强机制有效消除合作抑制。具体而言,JOLs引起的记忆改善幅度在合作组中似乎比在名义组中更大。这种差异增强可能抵消了合作检索干扰导致的典型记忆损害,从而使两组之间的最终表现达到统计上的等效。因此,在JOL条件下合作抑制效应可能会消失。本研究采用了2(组:合作组与名义组;被试间)×2(元记忆监测:有与无学习判断;被试内)×2(测试类型:识别与序列重建;被试内)混合因子设计。研究结果表明,进行学习判断显著提高了项目记忆表现,而对序列记忆没有显著影响。这表明反应性效应仅存在于项目记忆中。此外,研究发现合作组的项目识别和序列记忆表现均低于名义组,突出了合作抑制的存在。这些结果表明,反应性效应和合作抑制是两种不相互影响的不同记忆现象。