Authors
Monika Undorf, Edgar Erdfelder
Publication date
2015/5
Journal
Memory & cognition
Volume
43
Pages
647-658
Publisher
Springer US
Description
The cue-utilization view to judgments of learning (JOLs) assumes that both ease of processing during study and people’s beliefs about memory may contribute to people’s predictions on the likelihood of remembering recently studied information. However, a recent study (Mueller, Tauber, & Dunlosky, Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 20(2), 378–384, 2013; Experiment 3) found that processing fluency does not contribute to the effect of pair relatedness on JOLs, that is, to higher JOLs for related paired associates as compared to unrelated paired associates. We investigated whether this finding primarily depends on specific aspects of the paired associates employed or on the measure of processing fluency used in the previous study. In our first two experiments, participants therefore studied lists with (a) uniformly high associative strengths versus (b) a wide range of associative strengths. Results showed that …
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