The Influence of Judgments of Learning on Collaborative Memory for Items and Sequences
Xiaochun Luo, Qian Xiao, Weihai Tang

TL;DR
This study explores how making learning judgments affects memory in group settings, finding that it improves item memory but does not prevent collaborative memory issues.
Contribution
The study introduces a new perspective on how metamemory monitoring influences collaborative memory phenomena.
Findings
Making JOLs significantly enhances item memory performance.
Collaborative inhibition persists regardless of JOLs, indicating separate memory phenomena.
Abstract
The present study examined how making judgments of learning (JOLs) vs. not making judgments of learning (no-JOLs) influences item and sequential memory in collaborative contexts. According to the item-order hypothesis, making JOLs improves memory for specific items (i.e., item memory) but disrupts sequential memory where memory for temporal relationships between items is required. If JOLs do enhance item memory performance, the study predicts they may effectively eliminate collaborative inhibition through a compensatory enhancement mechanism. Specifically, the magnitude of JOL-induced memory improvement appears to be greater in collaborative groups than in nominal groups. This differential enhancement likely offsets the typical memory impairment caused by collaborative retrieval interference, resulting in statistically equivalent final performance between groups. Consequently, the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMemory Processes and Influences · Psychological and Educational Research Studies · Information Retrieval and Search Behavior
