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When is schematic knowledge used in source monitoring?
78
Citations
67
References
2002
Year
CognitionCommunicationKnowledge TechnologySocial SciencesManagementKnowledge EngineeringSystems EngineeringData IntegrationMemoryCognitive AnalysisSource MonitoringKnowledge RepresentationCognitive ScienceKnowledge AcquisitionInformation BehaviorSchematic KnowledgePrior Schematic KnowledgeInformation Processing (Psychology)Information ManagementHuman CognitionExperimental PsychologySocial CognitionCognitive ModelingKnowledge ManagementKnowledge IntegrationData Modeling
Source monitoring involves judgments regarding the origin of information (M. K. Johnson, S. Hashtroudi, & D. S. Lindsay, 1993). When participants cannot remember the source in a source-monitoring task, they may guess according to their prior schematic knowledge (U. J. Bayen, G. V. Nakamura, S. E. Dupuis, & C.-L. Yang, 2000). The present study aimed at specifying conditions under which schematic knowledge is used in source monitoring. The authors examined the time course of schema-based guesses with a response-signal technique (A. V. Reed, 1973), and multinomial models that separate memory and guessing bias. Use of schematic knowledge was observed only when asymptotic old-new recognition was low. The time course of schematic-knowledge retrieval followed an exponential growth function. Implications for theories of source monitoring are discussed.
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