University of Tasmania
Browse
Hickey_whole_thesis.pdf (581.54 kB)

The effects of snap decision making on episodic recognition memory

Download (581.54 kB)
thesis
posted on 2023-05-27, 09:24 authored by Hickey, E-JT
The present study is interested in whether recognition memory errors made from snap decisions can be detected and corrected. Fifty two participants from the University of Tasmania made a two-stage recognition decision to words in a test list. The first decision, was a fast (<1sec) recognition memory (old/new) decision; the second a slower confidence response (high, low, change of mind). Words in the test list were manipulated for frequency (high, low), in the English language, and concreteness (high, low). Analysis of the change of mind responses showed an equal reduction from first response to second in the false alarm rate for both high frequency and low frequency words, and a significantly larger improvement in the hit rate for low frequency words from first response to second. Changed responses had a longer processing time (680ms) than unchanged responses (390ms). A significant word frequency mirror effect was also found, but not a significant word concreteness effect. The results indicate that participants can detect and correct errors made from quick decisions, and have important implications for the ability of decision making models' to predict correct responses, and for reducing the noise in speed-accuracy trade-off experiments (Rabbitt, 1969).

History

Publication status

  • Unpublished

Rights statement

Copyright 2017 the author

Repository Status

  • Open

Usage metrics

    Thesis collection

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC