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Directed forgetting of stimulus-response associations

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Dames, Hannah ; Ragni, Marco ; Kiesel, Andrea ; Pfeuffer, Christina U.:
Directed forgetting of stimulus-response associations.
2022
Veranstaltung: Tagung experimentell arbeitender Psychologen (TeaP) 2022, 20.-23. März 2022, Köln.
(Veranstaltungsbeitrag: Videokonferenz, Poster)

Kurzfassung/Abstract

Humans can intentionally forget previously-learned information (directed forgetting, DF). Whereas many studies have demonstrated DF for lists of items (e.g., words), where memory for to-be-remembered (TBR) items is typically better than for to-be-forgotten (TBF) ones, the role of intentional forgetting in action control is less clear. Here, we investigated whether the instruction to remember or forget a stimulus affected the formation and/or retrieval of corresponding stimulus-response (S-R) associations. To do so, we combined the DF item-method with item-specific priming: By categorizing stimuli (Exp. 1-3: images, Exp. 4: words) in a prime phase, participants formed S-R associations. Directly after participants' responses, a memory cue indicated whether to remember or forget the stimulus for a later memory test. In the following probe phase, participants responded to the same stimuli, but the required response item-specifically repeated or switched. Typically, probe responses are faster for item-specific response repetitions rather than switches (S-R effect). In four experiments, these S-R effects did not differ between TBR and TBF stimuli. This was the case when S-R associations already existed before the memory instruction was given (Exp. 1), when stimulus, response, and memory cue were paired multiple times (Exp. 2), when learning new S-R associations (Exp. 3), and when using a different categorization task and word stimuli (Exp. 4). Thus, up- or downregulating the memory strength of a stimulus representation by the intent to remember or forget it does not inevitably affect the corresponding S-R association. This suggests that top-down memory control selectively operates on certain but not all representations associated with a learning episode (event file).

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Publikationsform:Veranstaltungsbeitrag (unveröffentlicht): Videokonferenz, Poster
Sprache des Eintrags:Englisch
Institutionen der Universität:Philosophisch-Pädagogische Fakultät > Psychologie > Juniorprofessur für Human-Technology Interaction
Titel an der KU entstanden:Nein
KU.edoc-ID:29871
Eingestellt am: 16. Mär 2022 15:35
Letzte Änderung: 16. Mär 2022 15:35
URL zu dieser Anzeige: https://edoc.ku.de/id/eprint/29871/
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