1. Electrophysiological decomposition of attentional factors on the hypercorrection effect of false lexical representations
- Author
-
Saeko Tanaka and Nobuyoshi Iwaki
- Subjects
Male ,Adolescent ,Feedback, Psychological ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Low Confidence ,Repression, Psychology ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,050105 experimental psychology ,Task (project management) ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,P3a ,0302 clinical medicine ,Japan ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,P3b ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,Attention ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Evoked Potentials ,Event (probability theory) ,05 social sciences ,Novelty ,Brain ,Electroencephalography ,Verbal Learning ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Pattern Recognition, Visual ,Reading ,Hypercorrection ,Mental Recall ,Female ,Metacognition ,Psychology ,Value (mathematics) ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
False memories endorsed with higher confidence are more likely to be corrected by feedback than those endorsed with lower confidence (hypercorrection effect). Errors made with high confidence and correct responses made with low confidence are both associated with large meta-memory mismatches. Therefore, they both represent a type of unexpected event which automatically captures participant attention, such that correct information provided via feedback is well-encoded. On the other hand, a study that measured participants’ perceived practical value for items suggested that voluntary allocation of attention might involve the hypercorrection effect. The present study involved a lexical learning task with 28 undergraduate student participants and measurement of automatic and voluntary attentional allocations via P3a/novelty P3 and P3b respectively, both of which are event-related potentials (ERPs). Behavioral results replicated the hypercorrection effect in a lexical learning task and showed modulation of the effect with regard to perceived practical value. In addition, ERP measurement results demonstrated that both automatic and voluntary allocations of attentional resources were independently involved in the hypercorrection phenomenon.
- Published
- 2018