The Importance of Truth: Joint Retrieval of “True” and “Important” Feedback in Multidimensional Source Memory
This article is a preprint and has not been certified by peer review [What does this mean?].
Author(s) / Creator(s)
Ford, Daria
Nieznański, Marek
Abstract / Description
Source memory for truth is usually better than for falsity and similar effects are observed for
important compared with unimportant information. A recently found interaction between
information veracity and importance indicates that people effectively prioritize encoding true
information (but not false). Yet, it is unclear whether the feedback about veracity and importance
of the information is integrated into joint memory representation. In the following experiment, we
investigated if source memory for veracity and importance dimensions is stochastically
dependent. Students (N = 82) memorized trivia statements along with their veracity and
importance status which resulted in four different combinations of sources (“true and important”,
“true and unimportant”, “false and important”, “false and unimportant”). The analysis with a
multidimensional source memory multinomial model revealed that the joint retrieval of “true” and
“important” feedback as compound information is better than for all other combinations.
Moreover, the veracity dimension was memorized better than the importance dimension,
showing that we remember whether information is true or false better than whether it is
important or unimportant.
Keyword(s)
source memory memory for truth and falsity value-directed remembering binding contextual informationPersistent Identifier
Date of first publication
2024-09-05
Publisher
PsychArchives
Citation
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Joint Retrieval of Veracity and Importance_Ford&Nieznański.pdfAdobe PDF - 470.66KBMD5: d449fb3efb04f97286913a8fe495b6e5
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Ford, Daria
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Nieznański, Marek
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PsychArchives acquisition timestamp2024-09-05T11:22:32Z
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Made available on2024-09-05T11:22:32Z
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Date of first publication2024-09-05
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Abstract / DescriptionSource memory for truth is usually better than for falsity and similar effects are observed for important compared with unimportant information. A recently found interaction between information veracity and importance indicates that people effectively prioritize encoding true information (but not false). Yet, it is unclear whether the feedback about veracity and importance of the information is integrated into joint memory representation. In the following experiment, we investigated if source memory for veracity and importance dimensions is stochastically dependent. Students (N = 82) memorized trivia statements along with their veracity and importance status which resulted in four different combinations of sources (“true and important”, “true and unimportant”, “false and important”, “false and unimportant”). The analysis with a multidimensional source memory multinomial model revealed that the joint retrieval of “true” and “important” feedback as compound information is better than for all other combinations. Moreover, the veracity dimension was memorized better than the importance dimension, showing that we remember whether information is true or false better than whether it is important or unimportant.en
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Publication statusother
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Review statusnotReviewed
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Persistent Identifierhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/10849
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Persistent Identifierhttps://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.15420
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Language of contenteng
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PublisherPsychArchives
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Is related tohttps://osf.io/tf9ah/
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Keyword(s)source memory
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Keyword(s)memory for truth and falsity
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Keyword(s)value-directed remembering
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Keyword(s)binding contextual information
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Dewey Decimal Classification number(s)150
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TitleThe Importance of Truth: Joint Retrieval of “True” and “Important” Feedback in Multidimensional Source Memoryen
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DRO typepreprint
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Visible tag(s)source memory
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Visible tag(s)memory for truth and falsity
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Visible tag(s)value-directed remembering
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Visible tag(s)binding contextual information