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Article
Are two heuristics better than one? The fluency and distinctiveness heuristics in recognition memory
Memory & Cognition (2011)
  • Marianne E. Lloyd
  • Jeremy K. Miller
Abstract
Four experiments were conducted to test the impact of having multiple heuristics (distinctiveness and fluency) available during a recognition test. Recent work by Gallo, Perlmutter, Moore, and Schacter (Memory & Cognition 36:461–466, 2008) suggested that fluency effects are reduced when the distinctiveness heuristic can be applied to a recognition decision. In Experiment 1, we used a response reversal paradigm (Van Zandt & Maldonado-Molina Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition 30:1147–1166, 2004) to demonstrate that participants transitioned from an early response strategy that was largely reliant on fluency to a later strategy in which the influences of fluency and distinctiveness were both observable. Experiments 2a, 2b, and 3 showed no evidence for reduction of the fluency heuristic after picture study when the test required a delayed response (Exp. 2a), confidence ratings (Exp. 2b), or the application of conceptual fluency (Exp. 3). The results are consistent with models of memory that assume that familiarity and recollection influence individual memory decisions Wixted (Psychological Review, 114:152–176, 2007).
Keywords
  • Familiarity in recognition memory,
  • Recollection,
  • Metamemory,
  • Heuristics
Publication Date
April 6, 2011
DOI
10.3758/s13421-011-0093-0
Citation Information
Marianne E. Lloyd and Jeremy K. Miller. "Are two heuristics better than one? The fluency and distinctiveness heuristics in recognition memory" Memory & Cognition Vol. 39 Iss. 7 (2011) p. 1264 - 1274
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/marianne_lloyd/20/