| Literature DB >> 32476137 |
Eva Rubínová1, Hartmut Blank1, Jonathan Koppel1, James Ost1.
Abstract
In today's globalized world, we frequently encounter unfamiliar events that we may have difficulty comprehending - and in turn remembering - due to a lack of appropriate schemata. This research investigated schema effects in a situation where participants established a complex new schema for an unfamiliar type of story through exposure to four variations. We found that immediate recall increased across subsequent stories and that distortions occurred less frequently - participants built on the emerging schema and gradually established representations of parts of the story that were initially transformed. In recall with delays increasing up to 1 month, quantitative measures indicated forgetting while distortions increased. The second focus of this research was on content and order deviation effects on recall. The content deviation, in contrast with previous repeated-event research, was not remembered well and was associated with lower recall; the order deviation had a similar (but expected) effect. We discuss discrepancies between results of this study and previous literature, which had focused on schemata for familiar events, in relation to stages of schema development: it seems that in unfamiliar repeated events, a complex new schema is in the early stages of formation, where the lack of attentional resources limits active processing of deviations.Entities:
Keywords: conventionalization; repeated events; schema; schema-deviation; source memory; unfamiliar stories
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32476137 DOI: 10.1111/bjop.12449
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Psychol ISSN: 0007-1269