Tuesday 28 October 2014

Making mistakes while learning good for memory: Study

"Making random guesses does not appear to benefit later memory for the right answer, but near-miss guesses act as stepping stones for retrieval of the correct information – and this benefit is seen in younger and older adults," said lead investigator Andree-Ann Cyr, a graduate student with Baycrest's Rotman Research Institute and the Department of Psychology at the University of Toronto.
  
Cyr's study expands upon a previous paper she published in 2012 which found that learning information the hard way by making mistakes (as opposed to just being told the correct answer) may be the best boot camp for older brains.
  
Cyr's latest research provides evidence that trial-and-error learning can benefit memory in both young and old when errors are meaningfully related to the right answer, and can actually harm memory when they are not.
  
In the study, 65 healthy younger adults (average age 22) and 64 healthy older adults (average age 72) learned target words (eg, rose) based either on the semantic category it belongs to (eg, a flower) or its word stem (eg, a word that begins with the letters 'ro').
  
For half of the words, participants were given the answer right away and for the other half, they were asked to guess at it before seeing the answer.
  
On a later memory test, participants were shown the categories or word stems and had to come up with the right answer. The researchers wanted to know if participants would be better at remembering rose if they had made wrong guesses prior to studying it rather than seeing it right away.
  
They found that this was only true if participants learned based on the categories. Guessing actually made memory worse when words were learned based on word stems. This was the case for both younger and older adults.
  
Cyr and her colleagues suggest this is because our memory organises information based on how it is conceptually rather than lexically related to other information.
  
For example, when you think of the word pear, your mind is more likely to jump to another fruit, such as apple, than to a word that looks similar, such as peer.
  
Wrong guesses only add value when they have something meaningful in common with right answers, researchers said.
  
By guessing first as opposed to just reading the answer, one is thinking harder about the information and making useful connections that can help memory.
  
Younger and older participants were more likely to remember the answer if they also remembered their wrong guesses, suggesting that these acted as stepping stones.
  
By contrast, when guesses only have letters in common with answers, they clutter memory because one cannot link them meaningfully.
  
The paper will be published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition.

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