Verbatim and gist memory and individual differences in inhibition,sustained attention,and working memory capacity |
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Authors: | Marek Nieznański Michał Obidziński |
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Affiliation: | Institute of Psychology, Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński University in Warsaw, Poland |
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Abstract: | In the present study, we explored whether individual differences in inhibition, sustained attention, and working memory capacity (WMC) are related to false memory task performance. We defined the processes in such a task according to the fuzzy trace theory and used multinomial modelling methodology to measure the contribution of these latent processes. We found higher verbatim memory in participants with a high WMC, as measured by the Rotation Span task, and in individuals who committed more errors in the Sustained Attention Response Task (SART). Participants with a high WMC and low-error level in SART showed higher gist memory for targets, and individuals high in WMC also rejected orthographically related distractors more effectively due to the recollection of distractors’ corresponding targets. We also observed that participants with better inhibition control were more conservative in guessing that an item was old. |
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Keywords: | False memory inhibition executive function working-memory capacity fuzzy-trace theory |
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