Publication | Closed Access
Positive and Negative Generation Effects in Source Monitoring
27
Citations
28
References
2006
Year
Environmental MonitoringCognitionPsycholinguisticsCommunicationAttentionHuman MemoryExplicit MemorySocial SciencesPsychologyMemoryLanguage StudiesSource MonitoringCognitive ScienceHuman CognitionInformation ManagementSource MemoryExperimental PsychologyReality MonitoringPerformance MonitoringDisturbance DetectionHuman-computer InteractionCognitive ModelingSystem Monitoring
Research is mixed as to whether self-generation improves memory for the source of information. We propose the hypothesis that positive generation effects (better source memory for self-generated information) occur in reality-monitoring paradigms, while negative generation effects (better source memory for externally presented information) tend to occur in external source-monitoring paradigms. This hypothesis was tested in an experiment in which participants read or generated words, followed by a memory test for the source of each word (read or generated) and the word's colour. Meiser and Bröder's (2002) multinomial model for crossed source dimensions was used to analyse the data, showing that source memory for generation (reality monitoring) was superior for the generated words, while source memory for word colour (external source monitoring) was superior for the read words. The model also revealed the influence of strong response biases in the data, demonstrating the usefulness of formal modelling when examining generation effects in source monitoring.
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