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The ironic effect of guessing: increased false memory for mediated lists in younger and older adults
Authors:Jennifer H Coane  Mark J Huff  Keith A Hutchison
Institution:1. Department of Psychology, Colby College, Waterville, ME, USA;2. Department of Psychology, Washington University in Saint Louis, Saint Louis, MO, USA;3. Department of Psychology, Montana State University, Bozeman, MT, USA
Abstract:Younger and older adults studied lists of words directly (e.g., creek, water) or indirectly (e.g., beaver, faucet) related to a nonpresented critical lure (CL; e.g., river). Indirect (i.e., mediated) lists presented items that were only related to CLs through nonpresented mediators (i.e., directly related items). Following study, participants completed a condition-specific task, math, a recall test with or without a warning about the CL, or tried to guess the CL. On a final recognition test, warnings (vs. math and recall without warning) decreased false recognition for direct lists, and guessing increased mediated false recognition (an ironic effect of guessing) in both age groups. The observed age-invariance of the ironic effect of guessing suggests that processes involved in mediated false memory are preserved in aging and confirms the effect is largely due to activation in semantic networks during encoding and to the strengthening of these networks during the interpolated tasks.
Keywords:False memory  spreading activation  aging  ironic effect of guessing
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