Strategy use and its evolvement in word list learning: a replication study

Matti Laine*, Daniel Fellman, Tilda Eräste, Liisa Ritakallio, Juha Salmi

*Tämän työn vastaava kirjoittaja

Tutkimustuotos: LehtiartikkeliArtikkeliTieteellinenvertaisarvioitu

4 Sitaatiot (Scopus)
7 Lataukset (Pure)

Abstrakti

Spontaneous strategy employment is important for memory performance, but systematic research on strategy use and within-task evolvement is limited. This online study aimed to replicate three main findings by Waris and colleagues in Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology (2021): in word-list learning, spontaneous strategy use (1) predicts better task performance, (2) stabilizes along the task, and (3) increases during the first two task blocks. We administered a shortened version of their original real-word list-learning task to 209 neurotypical adults. Their first finding was partly replicated: manipulation strategies (grouping, visualization, association, narrative, other strategy) but not maintenance strategies (rehearsal/repetition, selective focus) were associated with superior word recall. The second finding on the decrease in strategy changers over task blocks was replicated. The third finding turned out to be misguided: neither our nor the original study showed task-initial increase in strategy use in the real-word learning condition. Our results confirm the important role of spontaneous strategies in understanding memory performance and the existence of task-initial dynamics in strategy employment. They support the general conclusions by Waris and colleagues: task demands can trigger strategy use even in a familiar task like learning a list of common words, and evolution of strategy use during a memory task reflects cognitive skill learning.

AlkuperäiskieliEnglanti
Artikkeli230651
Sivumäärä14
JulkaisuRoyal Society Open Science
Vuosikerta11
Numero2
DOI - pysyväislinkit
TilaJulkaistu - 14 helmik. 2024
OKM-julkaisutyyppiA1 Julkaistu artikkeli, soviteltu

Sormenjälki

Sukella tutkimusaiheisiin 'Strategy use and its evolvement in word list learning: a replication study'. Ne muodostavat yhdessä ainutlaatuisen sormenjäljen.

Viittausmuodot