Children's Ability to Recall Unique Aspects of One Occurrence of a Repeated Event
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Glisic, Una
Roberts, Kim P
Powell, Martine
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Abstract
Preschool and school-age children's memory and source monitoring were investigated by questioning them about one occurrence of a repeated lab event (n=39). Each of the four occurrences had the same structure, but with varying alternatives for the specific activities and items presented. Variable details had a different alternative each time; hi/lo details presented the identical alternative three times and changed once. New details were present in one occurrence only and thus had no alternatives. Children more often confused variable, lo and new details across occurrences than hi details. The 4- to 5-year-old children were less accurate than 7- to 8-year-old children at attributing details to the correct occurrence when specifically asked. Younger children rarely recalled new details spontaneously, whereas 50% of the older children did and were above chance at attributing them to their correct occurrence. Results are discussed with reference to script theory, fuzzy-trace theory and the source-monitoring framework.
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Applied Cognitive Psychology
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25
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3
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© 2011 American Psycological Association. This article may not exactly replicate the final version published in the APA journal. It is not the copy of record. Reproduced here in accordance with publisher policy. Please refer to the journal link for access to the definitive, published version.
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Marketing
Cognitive and computational psychology
Social Sciences
Psychology, Experimental
FUZZY-TRACE THEORY
DEVELOPMENTAL-CHANGES
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Brubacher, SP; Glisic, U; Roberts, KP; Powell, M, Children's Ability to Recall Unique Aspects of One Occurrence of a Repeated Event, Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2011, 25 (3), pp. 351-358