Pre-testing effects are target-specific and are not driven by a generalised state of curiosity
Pre-testing effects are target-specific and are not driven by a generalised state of curiosity
Guessing an answer to an unfamiliar question prior to seeing the answer leads to better memory than studying alone (the pre-testing effect), which some theories attribute to increased curiosity. A similar effect occurs in general knowledge learning: people are more likely to recall information that they were initially curious to learn. Gruber and Ranganath [(2019). How curiosity enhances hippocampus-dependent memory: the prediction, appraisal, curiosity, and exploration (PACE) framework. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 23(12), 1014–1025] argued that unanswered questions can cause a state of curiosity during which encoding is enhanced for the missing answer, but also for incidental information presented at the time. If pre-testing similarly induces curiosity, then it too should produce better memory for incidental information. We tested this idea in three experiments that varied the order, nature and timing of the incidental material presented within a pre-testing context. All three experiments demonstrated a reliable pre-testing effect for the targets, but no benefit for the incidental material presented before the target. This pattern suggests that the pre-testing effect is highly specific and is not consistent with a generalised state of curiosity.
Hollins, Timothy
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Seabrooke, Tina
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Inkster, Angus
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Wills, Andy
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Mitchell, Chris
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7 December 2022
Hollins, Timothy
5dfad712-da0d-4236-be58-29b7c0717988
Seabrooke, Tina
bf0d9ea5-8cf7-494b-9707-891762fce6c3
Inkster, Angus
f36906c4-ca92-40ea-8585-089c175b0dad
Wills, Andy
eaaad932-a01d-4437-8787-a7005f44ed1d
Mitchell, Chris
95066cc4-403e-40cf-970e-5fef63de811b
Hollins, Timothy, Seabrooke, Tina, Inkster, Angus, Wills, Andy and Mitchell, Chris
(2022)
Pre-testing effects are target-specific and are not driven by a generalised state of curiosity.
Memory.
Abstract
Guessing an answer to an unfamiliar question prior to seeing the answer leads to better memory than studying alone (the pre-testing effect), which some theories attribute to increased curiosity. A similar effect occurs in general knowledge learning: people are more likely to recall information that they were initially curious to learn. Gruber and Ranganath [(2019). How curiosity enhances hippocampus-dependent memory: the prediction, appraisal, curiosity, and exploration (PACE) framework. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 23(12), 1014–1025] argued that unanswered questions can cause a state of curiosity during which encoding is enhanced for the missing answer, but also for incidental information presented at the time. If pre-testing similarly induces curiosity, then it too should produce better memory for incidental information. We tested this idea in three experiments that varied the order, nature and timing of the incidental material presented within a pre-testing context. All three experiments demonstrated a reliable pre-testing effect for the targets, but no benefit for the incidental material presented before the target. This pattern suggests that the pre-testing effect is highly specific and is not consistent with a generalised state of curiosity.
Text
Curiosity paper - accepted
- Accepted Manuscript
Text
Pre testing effects are target specific and are not driven by a generalised state of curiosity
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 24 November 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 7 December 2022
Published date: 7 December 2022
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 474491
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/474491
ISSN: 0965-8211
PURE UUID: cfafba03-61d0-46bf-ad1e-51eaa07c2551
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Date deposited: 22 Feb 2023 23:55
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:59
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Contributors
Author:
Timothy Hollins
Author:
Angus Inkster
Author:
Andy Wills
Author:
Chris Mitchell
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