Age-related differences in the relationship between confidence and false memory in a mnemonic discrimination task
Ágnes Szőllősi, Dorottya Bencze, Soma Zsebi, Eszter Juhász, Mihály Racsmány

TL;DR
Older adults show overconfidence in false memories for similar items, suggesting they may not recognize memory issues due to high confidence.
Contribution
The study reveals age-related overconfidence in false recollection during memory tasks involving similar items.
Findings
Older adults exhibited overconfidence in false memories for visually similar lures.
Overconfidence was not observed for completely new stimuli.
Results suggest older adults may not recognize memory problems due to high confidence in false memories.
Abstract
In addition to episodic memory loss there is an increase in false remembering in ageing especially when the discrimination between studied and new items is difficult in a recognition memory task. The aim of this study was to identify the underlying psychological mechanisms of this behavior, specifically, the possible role of false recollection. We used the Mnemonic Similarity Task, a widely used task in neuroscience research developed to assess the behavioral manifestation of hippocampal computations, pattern separation and pattern completion. First, older and young adults (n = 39 and 44, respectively) were presented with images of everyday objects. Then, on a surprise recognition test, they saw old (studied) and new (non-studied) items as well as visually similar lures of the images seen in the study phase. Instead of using the original Old/New test format, we asked participants to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMemory Processes and Influences · Memory and Neural Mechanisms · Cognitive Functions and Memory
