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Investigating the formation and consolidation of incidentally learned trust. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • People judge if someone is trustworthy based on where they look; if they focus on a target, they're seen as more trustworthy.*
  • Sleep helps us remember things better, but in this study, it didn't make a difference in remembering who was trustworthy.*
  • Even though participants couldn’t remember specific looks from faces right away, they still made accurate trust judgments a week later, showing trust is learned without remembering all the details.*

Article Abstract

People make inferences about the trustworthiness of others based on their observed gaze behavior. Faces that consistently look toward a target location are rated as more trustworthy than those that look away from the target. Representations of trust are important for future interactions; yet little is known about how they are consolidated in long-term memory. Sleep facilitates memory consolidation for incidentally learned information and may therefore support the retention of trust representations. We investigated the consolidation of trust inferences across periods of sleep or wakefulness. In addition, we employed a memory cueing procedure (targeted memory reactivation [TMR]) in a bid to strengthen certain trust memories over others. We observed no difference in the retention of trust inferences following delays of sleep or wakefulness, and there was no effect of TMR in either condition. Interestingly, trust inferences remained stable 1 week after learning, irrespective of the initial postlearning delay. A second experiment showed that this implicit learning occurs despite participants' being unable to explicitly recall the gaze behavior of specific faces immediately after encoding. Together, these results suggest that gist-like, social inferences are formed at the time of learning without retaining the original episodic memory and thus do not benefit from offline consolidation through replay. We discuss our findings in the context of a novel framework whereby trust judgments reflect an efficient, powerful, and adaptable storage device for social information. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7115124PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/xlm0000752DOI Listing

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