Test anxiety and breadth of encoding experiences in free recall |
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Authors: | John H. Mueller Michael R. Courtois |
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Affiliation: | University of Missouri, Columbia, USA |
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Abstract: | Subjects made three ratings for each of 30 words, then had an unannounced immediate free recall test and a second test after 1 week. There was no evidence to indicate significantly better retention on either test when the dimensions rated were unrelated as opposed to related. Subjects low on test anxiety performed better overall than subjects who scored high on either the emotionality or worry components of test anxiety. On the delayed test, the test anxiety effect was apparent only when study ratings involved unrelated dimensions (i.e., broad encoding). This interaction is consistent with two conclusions. First, rating related dimensions led to narrow encodings, thus hindering low-anxiety subjects who normally encode broadly. Second, even explicit ratings of unrelated dimensions did not induce high-anxiety subjects to encode more broadly. That the high-anxiety deficit was not overcome even with explicit orienting tasks may indicate inflexibility in deploying memory strategies. |
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Keywords: | Requests for reprints should be sent to: J. H. Mueller Psychology Department University of Missouri Columbia MO 65211. |
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