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Episodic feeling-of-knowing resolution derives from the quality of original encoding
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Episodic feeling-of-knowing resolution derives from the quality of original encoding

Christopher Hertzog, John Dunlosky and Starlette M. Sinclair
Memory & cognition, Vol.38(6), pp.771-784
09-01-2010
PMCID: PMC2943856
PMID: 20852240

Abstract

Psychology Psychology, Experimental Social Sciences
In recent studies, researchers have argued for adult age-related deficits in the resolution of episodic feeling of knowing (FOK) owing to a decline in inferential processes. In the present study, we introduce the memory constraint hypothesis, which argues that deficits are an outcome of differences in the level of learning. A repetition delay paradigm for a list of paired-associate items showed that repeated presentations at encoding increased memory performance and in turn increased FOK resolution for unrecalled items. Older adults who were given a 48-h delay between encoding and subsequent tests (and FOKs) had equivalent memory performance to younger adults who were given a 7-day delay. In this case, age equivalence arose in FOK resolution except at the lowest levels of recognition in the single-presentation condition. The use of effective strategies during encoding correlated with memory performance and FOKs, even for unrecalled pairs. These results are inconsistent with an inferential-deficit explanation of age deficits in FOK resolution; they point to the importance of original encoding quality as a potent contributor to FOK resolution, and they argue for equating age groups on memory performance when evaluating the episodic FOK resolution of age differences.
url
https://doi.org/10.3758/MC.38.6.771View
Published (Version of record) Open

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