The current research examined the effects of errorful generation on memory, focusing particularly on the roles of motivation and surprise. In two experiments, participants were first presented with photographs of faces and were asked to associate four facts with each photograph. On Generate trials, the participants guessed two of the facts (Guess targets) before those correct facts, and another two correct facts (Study targets), were revealed. On the remaining Read trials, all four facts were presented without a guessing stage. In Experiment 1, participants also ranked their motivation to know the answers before they were revealed, or their surprise on learning the true answers. Guess targets were subsequently better recognised than the con...
Historically, teaching methods that avoid having students make errors have been favored by educators...
The fluency of stimulus processing significantly contributes to recognition memory judgments. We inv...
Strack and Förster (1995) showed that, unlike remember responses, know responses in recognition memo...
Generating information from memory not only gives a read out of the contents of memory—it makes thos...
Potts and Shanks (2014) recently reported that making mistakes improved the encoding of novel inform...
Surprising feedback in a general knowledge test leads to an improvement in memory for both the surfa...
Testing has been found to be a powerful learning tool, but educators might be reluctant to make full...
In learning new information through testing with feedback, is it best for the learner to guess when ...
Taking a test has been shown to produce enhanced retention of the retrieved information. On tests, h...
Surprise has been explored as a cognitive‐emotional phenomenon that impacts many aspects of mental l...
Successfully retrieving information protects it against later forgetting. Failed retrieval attempts ...
Research has shown that emotional events are remembered better than neutral events, but might also e...
In two experiments, we investigated the role of perceptual information in spurious recognition judgm...
Relative to studying alone, guessing the meanings of unknown words can improve later recognition of ...
Participants viewed slides depicting ordinary routines (e.g., going grocery shopping) and later rece...
Historically, teaching methods that avoid having students make errors have been favored by educators...
The fluency of stimulus processing significantly contributes to recognition memory judgments. We inv...
Strack and Förster (1995) showed that, unlike remember responses, know responses in recognition memo...
Generating information from memory not only gives a read out of the contents of memory—it makes thos...
Potts and Shanks (2014) recently reported that making mistakes improved the encoding of novel inform...
Surprising feedback in a general knowledge test leads to an improvement in memory for both the surfa...
Testing has been found to be a powerful learning tool, but educators might be reluctant to make full...
In learning new information through testing with feedback, is it best for the learner to guess when ...
Taking a test has been shown to produce enhanced retention of the retrieved information. On tests, h...
Surprise has been explored as a cognitive‐emotional phenomenon that impacts many aspects of mental l...
Successfully retrieving information protects it against later forgetting. Failed retrieval attempts ...
Research has shown that emotional events are remembered better than neutral events, but might also e...
In two experiments, we investigated the role of perceptual information in spurious recognition judgm...
Relative to studying alone, guessing the meanings of unknown words can improve later recognition of ...
Participants viewed slides depicting ordinary routines (e.g., going grocery shopping) and later rece...
Historically, teaching methods that avoid having students make errors have been favored by educators...
The fluency of stimulus processing significantly contributes to recognition memory judgments. We inv...
Strack and Förster (1995) showed that, unlike remember responses, know responses in recognition memo...