Self-regulated Learning Flashcards
Arbuckle & Cuddy 1969 - JOL correlates with performance imperfectly
- investigated how people made predictions about their own future memory performance
- used verbal and numeral materials (pairs of two digits)
- small study 4 subjects
- study phase: participants studied lists of pairs (e.g. T- 23)
test phase: made judgements of learning based on how well they thought they would be able to recall the pair (e.g. remembering T was matched with 23) - correct answer + wrong prediction = metacognitive error
- wrong answer + correct prediction = metacognitive error
Arbuckle & Cuddy 1969 - JOL correlates with performance imperfectly FINDINGS
FOUND >
- people better than chance at making these judgements
- memory performance better for items they predicted they would remember (vs forget) > however imperfect
- not interested in accuracy or memory (second order judgements) and rather metacognitive judgements
- Criticisms > materials used artificial and binary
Rhodes & Tauber 2011 - Metanalysis JOL and Memory performance
- JOL are positively correlated with memory but imperfect
> Correlations between JOL and objective memory performance > Mean G is ~ 0.45 - perhaps access is not direct
Rhodes and Castel 2008 - Perceptual fluency and JOL (FONT SIZE)
- ease of processing affects JOL
- gave ppts text > two different fonts for each condition but same text > in one condition text larger font size
- easier to read (larger) font size correlated led to feeling of increased fluency (ease of learning)
- ppts made higher JOL for larger font size despite no differences in actual recall between two font sizes
Begg et al 1989 - Conceptual fluency and JOL (FREQUENCY)
- ease of processing affects JOL
- ppts given list of words to remember
- altered frequency of words (high, low, medium)
- ppts made higher JOL for higher frequency words > idea that higher frequency words will be processed more fluently
- FOUND opposite effect with actual performance > dissociation between JOL and memory performance
Nelson & Dulonsky 1991 - Timing of JOL and answer accessibility
- delaying when a JOL is made improves JOL accuracy
- ppts given learning task > presented with two unrelated words on each trial
- every now and then ppts asked to make JOL > when one word seen would they remember the pair (on a scale of 0-100)
- for some items asked to give a delayed JOL instead of right after > followed by test phase with recall > paired association test
FOUND - immediate JOL condition > correlation with memory > G = .38
- delayed JOL > G= .9
- better performance with delay > perhaps due to time to test yourself
Zechmeister & Shaugnessy 1980 - Study Condition and JOL
- spacing of learning trials
- ppts given word > asked to make JOL of later recall
- key manipulation > ppts see each word twice either in a row (massed practice) or interleaved (distributed practice)
- high JOL for massed practice however recall better for distributed practice
- perhaps due to fluency affect of massed trials > demonstrates people use other cues to introspect which may lead to false JOL
Benjamin et al 1998 - Dissociable JOL and Recall (SPEED)
- asked ppts trivia questions > later asked to recall answers previously given
- FOUND > for quicker answers, ppts more likely to predict that they would later recall
- systematic relationship between speed and JOL > speed used as a cue
- opposite pattern found in objective memory performance > slower initial answer = more accurate later recall