Affiliation:
1. Nara University of Education
Abstract
The relationship between the criterion for choosing and the self-choice effects (greater recall in a self-choice compared to a forced-choice condition) on intentional memory was examined. Thirty-three female nursing school volunteers were administered 24 word pairs in a 2 × 2 design to assess the influence of motivation upon free recall. When word pairs were presented to participants, they were asked to choose a word to-be-remembered, either in a self-choice condition or a forced-choice condition. Words chosen by the participants were recalled more often than those chosen by the experimenter (forced choice). Thus, the self-choice effect was greater for words chosen with a self-reference criterion compared to a metamemory criterion, supporting the integration hypothesis as the origin of the self-choice effect.
Subject
Sensory Systems,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
Cited by
1 articles.
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1. The Promise and Peril of Choosing for Motivation and Learning;The Cambridge Handbook of Motivation and Learning;2019-02-14