Strategic monitoring improves prospective memory: A meta-analysis

被引:4
|
作者
Peper, Phil [1 ,2 ]
Ball, B. Hunter [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Texas Arlington, Dept Psychol, Arlington, TX USA
[2] Univ Texas Arlington, Dept Psychol, Arlington, TX 76019 USA
来源
关键词
Prospective memory; strategic monitoring; attention; memory; context; meta-analysis; CONTEXT; RETRIEVAL; INTENTION; COSTS; TASK; PERFORMANCE; SIMULATION; SUPPORT; BINDING;
D O I
10.1177/17470218231161015
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Monitoring the environment for target events that trigger prospective memory (PM) retrieval requires cognitive resources, reflected by costs to ongoing task performance (i.e., worse accuracy and/or slower response times). Strategic monitoring refers to the use of context to engage or disengage monitoring when a PM target is anticipated or unanticipated. Laboratory strategic monitoring studies have found mixed results as to whether context specification improves PM performance. This study employed a meta-analytic technique to assess the overall effect of context specification on PM performance and ongoing task metrics of strategic monitoring. Overall, context specification improved PM performance when the target was anticipated and improved ongoing task performance (speed and accuracy) when the target was not anticipated. Moderator analyses revealed the degree of slowing in anticipated contexts predicted how much context specification improved PM performance. However, the benefits to PM performance from context specification differed by the type of procedure used. PM performance was improved when context changes could be predicted during blocked or proximity procedures, but not when context varied randomly in trial-level procedures. These results provide insights into the mechanisms underlying strategic monitoring and guidance for researchers on which procedures to be use depending on the theory-driven questions.
引用
收藏
页码:2546 / 2569
页数:24
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Institutions, resources, and strategic orientations: A meta-analysis
    Peng, Li
    Li, Yuan
    van Essen, Marc
    Peng, Mike W.
    ASIA PACIFIC JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT, 2020, 37 (02) : 499 - 529
  • [32] Institutions, resources, and strategic orientations: A meta-analysis
    Li Peng
    Yuan Li
    Marc van Essen
    Mike W. Peng
    Asia Pacific Journal of Management, 2020, 37 : 499 - 529
  • [33] Strategic CSR: A Concept Building Meta-Analysis
    Vishwanathan, Pushpika
    van Oosterhout, Hans J.
    Heugens, Pursey P. M. A. R.
    Duran, Patricio
    van Essen, Marc
    JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT STUDIES, 2020, 57 (02) : 314 - 350
  • [34] Neural bases of prospective memory: A meta-analysis and the "Attention to Delayed Intention" (AtoDI) model
    Cona, Giorgia
    Scarpazza, Cristina
    Sartori, Giuseppe
    Moscovitch, Morris
    Bisiacchi, Patrizia Silvia
    NEUROSCIENCE AND BIOBEHAVIORAL REVIEWS, 2015, 52 : 21 - 37
  • [35] A meta-analysis of task-related influences in prospective memory in traumatic brain injury
    Gonzalez, Daniela Wong
    Buchanan, Lori
    NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL REHABILITATION, 2019, 29 (05) : 657 - 671
  • [36] Effects of cue focality on the neural mechanisms of prospective memory: A meta-analysis of neuroimaging studies
    Giorgia Cona
    Patrizia Silvia Bisiacchi
    Giuseppe Sartori
    Cristina Scarpazza
    Scientific Reports, 6
  • [37] Effects of cue focality on the neural mechanisms of prospective memory: A meta-analysis of neuroimaging studies
    Cona, Giorgia
    Bisiacchi, Patrizia Silvia
    Sartori, Giuseppe
    Scarpazza, Cristina
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2016, 6
  • [38] A meta-analysis of memory ability in synaesthesia
    Ward, Jamie
    Field, Andy P.
    Chin, Taylor
    MEMORY, 2019, 27 (09) : 1299 - 1312
  • [39] Implicit memory in schizophrenia: a meta-analysis
    Spataro, Pietro
    Saraulli, Daniele
    Cestari, Vincenzo
    Costanzi, Marco
    Sciarretta, Antonio
    Rossi-Arnaud, Clelia
    COMPREHENSIVE PSYCHIATRY, 2016, 69 : 136 - 144
  • [40] Aging and Recognition Memory: A Meta-Analysis
    Fraundorf, Scott H.
    Hourihan, Kathleen L.
    Peters, Rachel A.
    Benjamin, Aaron S.
    PSYCHOLOGICAL BULLETIN, 2019, 145 (04) : 339 - 371