| Literature DB >> 33275057 |
Timothy D Kelley1, Debbie A McNeely2, Michael J Serra1, Tyler Davis1.
Abstract
Research in metacognition suggests that the information people use to predict their memory performance can vary depending on the contexts in which they make their predictions. For example, if people judge their memories after a delay from initial encoding, they may be more likely to use retrieved information about the past encoding experience than if they judged memories immediately after encoding. Although this seems intuitive, past behavioral and neuroimaging work has not tested whether delayed memory judgments are more strongly coupled with information about past experiences than immediate memory judgments. We scanned participants using functional MRI while they encoded paired associates and made predictions about their future memory performance either immediately after encoding or after a delay. Consistent with the hypothesis that people use retrieved information about past experiences to inform delayed memory judgments, our results showed that activation patterns associated with past experience were more strongly coupled with delayed memory judgments than with immediate ones.Entities:
Keywords: cognitive neuroscience; functional MRI; metacognition; metamemory; open data
Year: 2020 PMID: 33275057 DOI: 10.1177/0956797620958004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychol Sci ISSN: 0956-7976