Back to Search Start Over

Don't Ditch the Laptop Just Yet: A Direct Replication of Mueller and Oppenheimer's (2014) Study 1 Plus Mini Meta-Analyses Across Similar Studies

Authors :
Thomas E. Gartman
Ycar Devis
Caitlin Kornick
Kathy Chin
Meghan K. O’Brien
Jessica Paola Jimbo
Zachary J. Kramer
Jonah E. Zarrow
Zaenab Ayotola Onipede
Emily Chen
Jasper H. Park
Micaela Jen Silver
Jiaqi Yuan
Grace E. Konstantin
Nicole Marie May
Renee S. Brody
Alec J. Lotstein
Lena J. Chang
Grant J. Steinhauer
Gregory Chin
Dylan Van Hong
Dominique T. Zarrella
E. Na
Noah W. Weinflash
Alexandra S. Mueller
Avery Glennon Spratt
Rachel E. Stein
Daniel Knight
Michael C. Morscher
Vincent N. Duong
Michael Z. Leonard
Catherine E. Perloff
Selena Groh
Jillian E. Schreier
Elizabeth C. McCall
Hayley Long
Amelia D. Moser
Julia Mansfield Fuller
Victoria A. Floerke
Angeliki Perdikari
Devon K. Valera
Ross A. Hamilton
Akash A. Pillai
Ben Ewing
Erica R. Albert
Elizabeth K. Dossett
Ally Burnstein
Nick Dulchin
Avni Rajpal
Heather L. Urry
Melissa Dong
Avram Block
Monica Gabriella Lyons
Isabelle R. Newman
Amanda M. Danielson
Myrna-Nahisha A. Lyncee
Christin A. Mujica
Emily M. Bowers
Clinton S. Perry
Eli Maayan
Caroline Ackerley Bollinger
Ben G. Cooper
Meghan S. Lauzé
Justin R. Shangguan
Will Hodge
Samantha M. Vervoordt
Rachel C. Perry
Aava B. Jahan
Chad R. Goldberg
Naz Akdilek
Jesse Greenfield
Tommaso Lombardi
Lena Walton
Karen Weinstock
Emma Ranalli
Chakrapand Paul Chiarawongse
Joshua E. Insler
Danielle A. Pace
Emma M. Kahn
Katherine Adele Corneilson
Elizabeth Davis
Chelsea S. Crittle
Misha S. Linnehan
Katherine Alexandra Ochoa Castillo
Allissa K. Chan
Petrina C. Chan
Rhea Ann Charlotte Montgomery-Walsh
Kelly C. Burk
Source :
Psychological science. 32(3)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

In this direct replication of Mueller and Oppenheimer’s (2014) Study 1, participants watched a lecture while taking notes with a laptop ( n = 74) or longhand ( n = 68). After a brief distraction and without the opportunity to study, they took a quiz. As in the original study, laptop participants took notes containing more words spoken verbatim by the lecturer and more words overall than did longhand participants. However, laptop participants did not perform better than longhand participants on the quiz. Exploratory meta-analyses of eight similar studies echoed this pattern. In addition, in both the original study and our replication, higher word count was associated with better quiz performance, and higher verbatim overlap was associated with worse quiz performance, but the latter finding was not robust in our replication. Overall, results do not support the idea that longhand note taking improves immediate learning via better encoding of information.

Details

ISSN :
14679280
Volume :
32
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Psychological science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....da68f6916f2cc43a4f948f7fd7e4dcd5