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Does the reactivity effect of judgments of learning transfer to learning of new information?

Baike Li, Wenbo Zhao, Aike Shi, Yongen Zhong, Xiao Hu, Meng Liu, Liang Luo, Chunliang Yang

2023Memory14 citationsDOI

Abstract

. The current study was designed to explore whether the reactivity effect transfers to subsequent learning of new information. Participants studied two blocks of words (Experiment 1) or related word pairs (Experiments 2 & 3). In Block 1, participants in the experimental (JOL) group made a JOL while studying each item, whereas the control (no-JOL) group did not make item-by-item JOLs. Then both groups studied Block 2, in which they did not make JOLs, and finally, they took a test on Blocks 1 and 2. Across Experiments 1 -3, the results showed superior Block 1 test performance in the JOL than in the no-JOL group, demonstrating a positive reactivity effect. Critically, there was minimal difference in Block 2 test performance between the two groups, implying little transfer of the positive reactivity effect to subsequent learning of new information. Furthermore, Experiment 3 demonstrated that the reactivity effect still failed to transfer even when participants explicitly appreciated the benefits of making JOLs. Educational implications are discussed.

Topics & Concepts

PsychologyReactivity (psychology)Block (permutation group theory)Cognitive psychologyNegative transferTest (biology)Social psychologyMetamemoryMetacognitionCognitionMathematicsMedicineAlternative medicineFirst languageGeometryPhilosophyPathologyLinguisticsNeuroscienceBiologyPaleontologyMemory Processes and InfluencesPsychological and Educational Research StudiesNeural and Behavioral Psychology Studies
Does the reactivity effect of judgments of learning transfer to learning of new information? | Litcius