Value-directed memory effects on item and context memory

被引:0
|
作者
Jonathan J. Villaseñor
Allison M. Sklenar
Andrea N. Frankenstein
Pauline Urban Levy
Matthew P. McCurdy
Eric D. Leshikar
机构
[1] University of Illinois at Chicago,Department of Psychology
来源
Memory & Cognition | 2021年 / 49卷
关键词
Value-directed remembering; Item memory; Source memory; Context memory; Memory characteristics questionnaire;
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学科分类号
摘要
The ability to prioritize learning some information over others when that information is considered important or valuable is known as value-directed remembering. In these experiments, we investigate how value influences different aspects of memory, including item memory (memory for the to-be-learned materials) and context memory (memory for peripheral details that occurred when studying items) to get a better understanding of how people prioritize learning information. In this investigation, participants encoded words associated with a range of values (binned into higher, medium, and lower value in Experiment 1, and into higher and lower value in Experiment 2) for a subsequent memory test that measured item memory (Is this item old or new?) as well as both objective context memory (memory for an objectively verifiable contextual detail: In which voice was this item spoken?) and subjective context memory (How many visual, auditory, and extraneous thoughts/feelings can you remember associated with this item?). Results indicated that value influenced item memory but had no effect on objective context memory in both Experiments. In Experiment 2, results showed better subjective context memory for multiple episodic details for higher-value relative to lower-value materials. Overall, these findings suggest that value has a strong influence over some aspects of memory, but not others. This work gives a richer understanding of how people prioritize learning more important over less important information.
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页码:1082 / 1100
页数:18
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