2011
DOI: 10.1016/j.jml.2010.09.001
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Influences of source–item contingency and schematic knowledge on source monitoring: Tests of the probability-matching account

Abstract: The authors investigated conditions under which judgments in source-monitoring tasks are influenced by prior schematic knowledge. According to a probability-matching account of source guessing (Spaniol & Bayen, 2002), when people do not remember the source of information, they match source guessing probabilities to the perceived contingency between sources and item types. When they do not have a representation of a contingency, they base their guesses on prior schematic knowledge. The authors provide support f… Show more

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Cited by 64 publications
(165 citation statements)
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“…Participants who received the information after encoding showed schema-consistent bias in their source attributions, whereas participants who had already received the information before encoding showed no such bias. However, Bayen and Kuhlmann (2011) found that source guessing in this schema-before-encoding condition was only unbiased in a full-attention condition (in contrast to a divided-attention condition) at encoding. With divided attention at encoding, schema bias occurred.…”
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confidence: 76%
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“…Participants who received the information after encoding showed schema-consistent bias in their source attributions, whereas participants who had already received the information before encoding showed no such bias. However, Bayen and Kuhlmann (2011) found that source guessing in this schema-before-encoding condition was only unbiased in a full-attention condition (in contrast to a divided-attention condition) at encoding. With divided attention at encoding, schema bias occurred.…”
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confidence: 76%
“…Therefore, we should find a positive relationship between participants' perceived contingencies and the source-guessing parameter g. Bayen and Kuhlmann (2011) only demonstrated this relationship at a group level. However, within the same experimental setting, individual variations in source-guessing bias are possible (cf.…”
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confidence: 84%
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