The use of cue familiarity during retrieval failure is affected by past versus future orientation |
| |
Authors: | Anne M. Cleary |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Department of Psychology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, USA anne.cleary@colostate.edu |
| |
Abstract: | Cue familiarity that is brought on by cue resemblance to memory representations is useful for judging the likelihood of a past occurrence with an item that fails to actually be retrieved from memory. The present study examined the extent to which this type of resemblance-based cue familiarity is used in future-oriented judgments made during retrieval failure. Cue familiarity was manipulated using a previously-established method of creating differing degrees of feature overlap between the cue and studied items in memory, and the primary interest was in how these varying degrees of cue familiarity would influence future-oriented feeling-of-knowing (FOK) judgments given in instances of cued recall failure. The present results suggest that participants do use increases in resemblance-based cue familiarity to infer an increased likelihood of future recognition of an unretrieved target, but not to the extent that they use it to infer an increased likelihood of past experience with an unretrieved target. During retrieval failure, the increase in future-oriented FOK judgments with increasing cue familiarity was significantly less than the increase in past-oriented recognition judgments with increasing cue familiarity. |
| |
Keywords: | Recognition without cued recall Retrieval failure Feeling of knowing Metacognition Familiarity |
|
|