AI Article Synopsis

  • * People who remembered things correctly were faster to answer questions, while slower responses often indicated less accurate memories.
  • * The study also discovered that when people were confident about their memories, it usually meant they remembered things correctly, and this confidence connected to how hard it was to remember those details.

Article Abstract

Evaluating eyewitness testimonies has proven a difficult task. Recent research, however, suggests that incorrect memories are more effortful to retrieve than correct memories, and confidence in a memory is based on retrieval effort. We aimed to replicate and extend these findings, adding retrieval latency as a predictor of memory accuracy. Participants watched a film sequence with a staged crime and were interviewed about its content. We then analyzed retrieval effort cues in witness responses. Results showed that incorrect memories included more "effort cues" than correct memories. While correct responses were produced faster than incorrect responses, delays in responses proved a better predictor of accuracy than response latency. Furthermore, participants were more confident in correct than incorrect responses, and the effort cues partially mediated this confidence-accuracy relation. In sum, the results support previous findings of a relationship between memory accuracy and objectively verifiable cues to retrieval effort.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6450142PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.00703DOI Listing

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