| Literature DB >> 32863020 |
Xinyi Lu1, Megan O Kelly2, Evan F Risko2.
Abstract
Offloading to-be-remembered information is a ubiquitous memory strategy, yet in relying on external memory stores, our ability to recall from internal memory is often diminished. In the present investigation, we examine how offloading impacts true and false recall. Across three experiments, participants studied and wrote down word lists that were each strongly associated with an unstudied critical word. Recall in the Offloading condition (i.e., when they were told that they would have access to their written lists during recall) was contrasted with a No-Offloading condition (i.e., when they were told that they would not have access to their written lists during recall). We found that offloading decreased true recall of presented words while increasing false recall for unpresented critical words. Results are discussed in terms of offloading's differential effects on the formation of gist and verbatim traces during encoding.Entities:
Keywords: Cognitive offloading; False memory; Memory; Recall
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32863020 DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2020.104428
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cognition ISSN: 0010-0277