Strong memories are hard to scale.

People are generally skilled at using a confidence scale to rate the strength of their memories over a wide range. Specifically, low-confidence recognition decisions are often associated with close-to-chance accuracy, whereas high-confidence recognition decisions can be associated with close-to-perfect accuracy. However, using a 20-point rating scale, the authors found that the ability to scale memory strength had its limitations in that a high proportion of list items received the highest rating of 20. Efforts to induce participants to differentiate between these strong memories using emphatic instructions and alternative scales were not successful. Remember/know judgments indicated that these strong and hard-to-scale memories were often based on familiarity (not just recollection). Providing error feedback on a plurals discrimination task finally produced a high-confidence criterion shift. The authors suggest that the ability to scale strong (and almost perfectly accurate) memories may be limited because of the absence of differential error feedback for very strong memories in the past (the kind of differential error feedback that may account for the memory-scaling expertise that participants otherwise exhibit).

[1]  J. Gardiner Functional aspects of recollective experience , 1988, Memory & cognition.

[2]  R. Newman,et al.  Effect of Age, Skill, and Performance Feedback on Children's Judgments of Confidence. , 1987 .

[3]  L. Squire,et al.  Recognition memory and the hippocampus: A test of the hippocampal contribution to recollection and familiarity. , 2010, Learning & memory.

[4]  John T Wixted,et al.  In defense of the signal detection interpretation of remember/know judgments , 2004, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[5]  R. K. Simpson Nature Neuroscience , 2022 .

[6]  Michael D Rugg,et al.  Encoding and the Durability of Episodic Memory: A Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study , 2005, The Journal of Neuroscience.

[7]  Amy H. Criss,et al.  The distribution of subjective memory strength: List strength and response bias , 2009, Cognitive Psychology.

[8]  James P. Egan,et al.  Recognition memory and the operating characteristic. , 1958 .

[9]  Justin Kantner,et al.  Can corrective feedback improve recognition memory? , 2010, Memory & cognition.

[10]  R. Ratcliff,et al.  Retrieval Processes in Recognition Memory , 1976 .

[11]  I. Dobbins,et al.  Examining recognition criterion rigidity during testing using a biased-feedback technique: Evidence for adaptive criterion learning , 2008, Memory & cognition.

[12]  J. Wixted,et al.  A continuous dual-process model of remember/know judgments. , 2010, Psychological review.

[13]  John M. Gardiner,et al.  On Reporting Recollective Experiences and “Direct Access to Memory Systems” , 1997 .

[14]  J. Wixted,et al.  On the difference between strength-based and frequency-based mirror effects in recognition memory. , 1998, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[15]  Baruch Fischhoff,et al.  Calibration of Probabilities: The State of the Art , 1977 .

[16]  Jeffrey N Rouder,et al.  Latent mnemonic strengths are latent: A comment on Mickes, Wixted, and Wais (2007) , 2010, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[17]  B. Knowlton,et al.  A Dissociation of Encoding and Retrieval Processes in the Human Hippocampus , 2005, The Journal of Neuroscience.

[18]  Suparna Rajaram,et al.  Remembering and knowing: Two means of access to the personal past , 1993, Memory & cognition.

[19]  N. Anderson Scales and statistics: parametric and nonparametric. , 1961, Psychological bulletin.

[20]  Anders Winman,et al.  Calibration and diagnosticity of confidence in eyewitness identification: Comments on what can be inferred from the low confidence-accuracy correlation , 1996 .

[21]  Michael Wilson MRC Psycholinguistic Database , 2001 .

[22]  A. Tversky,et al.  Judgment under Uncertainty: Heuristics and Biases , 1974, Science.

[23]  Kenneth A. Norman,et al.  Recollection, Familiarity, and Cortical Reinstatement: A Multivoxel Pattern Analysis , 2009, Neuron.

[24]  Caren M. Rotello,et al.  Memory strength and the decision process in recognition memory , 2007, Memory & cognition.

[25]  Useful scientific theories are useful: A reply to Rouder, Pratte, and Morey (2010) , 2010 .

[26]  Robert T. Knight,et al.  Effects of extensive temporal lobe damage or mild hypoxia on recollection and familiarity , 2002, Nature Neuroscience.

[27]  J. Dunn Remember-know: a matter of confidence. , 2004, Psychological review.

[28]  John T. Wixted,et al.  Remember/Know Judgments Probe Degrees of Recollection , 2008, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[29]  J. Metcalfe,et al.  The correction of errors committed with high confidence , 2006 .

[30]  Geoffrey R. Loftus,et al.  Accounts of the confidence-accuracy relation in recognition memory , 2000, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[31]  A. Yonelinas Receiver-operating characteristics in recognition memory: evidence for a dual-process model. , 1994, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[32]  B. Fischhoff,et al.  Calibration of probabilities: the state of the art to 1980 , 1982 .

[33]  K. McDermott,et al.  Creating false memories: Remembering words not presented in lists. , 1995 .

[34]  D. Norman Learning and Memory , 1982 .

[35]  John T Wixted,et al.  A direct test of the unequal-variance signal detection model of recognition memory , 2007, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[36]  Lisa K. Fazio,et al.  Surprising feedback improves later memory , 2009, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[37]  Caren M Rotello,et al.  Theremember response: Subject to bias, graded, and not a process-pure indicator of recollection , 2005, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[38]  A P Yonelinas,et al.  Consciousness, control, and confidence: the 3 Cs of recognition memory. , 2001, Journal of experimental psychology. General.

[39]  R Ratcliff,et al.  Testing global memory models using ROC curves. , 1992, Psychological review.

[40]  R. W. Kulhavy,et al.  Responding to Feedback after Multiple-choice Answers: The Influence of Response Confidence , 1992 .