Modeling collaborative memory with SAM.

Mem Cognit

Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, USA.

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Research on human memory has primarily focused on individuals, but there is a growing interest in how people remember information together, specifically looking at a phenomenon called collaborative inhibition, where groups often recall less than individuals.
  • A new framework is introduced that expands the Search of Associative Memory (SAM) model to analyze how multiple models recalling together can lead to this collaborative inhibition, strongly supporting the retrieval disruption hypothesis.
  • This framework not only explains individual and group memory effects but also sets the stage for future studies on larger groups, shared knowledge, and the spread of false memories in collaborative settings.

Article Abstract

While humans often encode and retrieve memories in groups, the bulk of our knowledge of human memory comes from paradigms with individuals in isolation. The primary phenomenon of interest within the relatively new field of collaborative memory is collaborative inhibition: the tendency for collaborative groups to underperform in free recall tasks compared with noncollaborative groups of the same size. This effect has been found in a variety of materials and group compositions. However, most research in this field is led by verbal conceptual theories without guidance from formal computational models. We present a framework to scale the Search of Associative Memory model (SAM) to collaborative free recall paradigms with multiple models working together. Multiple SAM models recalling together naturally produce collaborative inhibition when the group members use recalls by the group as cues to retrieve from memory, strongly supporting the "retrieval disruption" hypothesis. This work shows that SAM can act as a unified theory to explain both individual and collaborative memory effects and offers a framework for future predictions of scaling to increased group sizes, shared knowledge, and factors facilitating the spread of false memories in groups.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3758/s13421-024-01647-zDOI Listing

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