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Title: Metacognition - Outline


1
Metacognition - Outline
2
Causal Effects of Conscious Experience
  • Broadest Case
  • Mental states ? Behavior
  • I want a beer, I think beer is in fridge, ? I
    open fridge
  • A Narrower Case (Metacognition)
  • Knowledge about cognition ? control cognition
  • I believe I will not remember the name of the
    person I just met ? I may take special measures
    to commit her name to memory (think that Rita
    rhymes with pita).

3
Metacognition
  • Knowledge about cognition (a conscious
    experience).
  • Knowledge about tasks (e.g., rote vs deep
    encoding)
  • Knowledge about persons (e.g., I am not good at
    this)
  • Control of cognitive processes. For example,
  • Which strategy to use
  • How much time to allocate to studying
  • Monitoring of cognitive processes. For example,
  • Ease of Learning learning names is difficult
  • Judgment of Learning (JoL) I wont remember
    that name
  • Feeling of Knowing (FoK) I feel that I know her
    name
  • Confidence Judgment Im not sure, it may be
    Rita

4
Monitoring
Ease-of- Learning Judgment
Confidence in Retrieved answer
Feeling of Knowledge
Judgment of Learning
Encoding
Retrieval
Retention
In Advance Of Learning
Ongoing Learning
Self-directed search
Maintenance of Knowledge
Output of Response
Select Search Strategy
Terminate Search
Select Encoding strategy
Allocate Study Time
Control
Nelson Narens, 1990
5
Judgment of Learning (JoL)
  • JoL I will I be able to remember this at a
    later time (at test)  
  • Example
  • - Study this pair Captain - Carbon
  • - Make a JoL How likely that I will remember
    the target word
  • that went with Captain? 25 50  75  100
  • - Test Captain ________
  • Findings
  • JoL correlates with recall - if I think I know
    it, its likely I do know it
  • but this correlation is far from perfect (usually
    less than .50)
  • You can also have aggregate JoL at the end of the
    list.

6
Monitoring Effectiveness JoL recall
  • Resolution (aka discrimination accuracy or
    relative accuracy)
  • The extent to which the subject is able to
    distinguish between answers that are more likely
    or less likely to be correct.
  • Calibration
  • Whether there is overconfidence or underconfidence

7
How do we judge what we know and what we dont?
That is, what cues are used for JoL?
  • A hint to this question comes from studies
    looking at immediate JoL vs. delayed JoL
  • Immediate JoL
  • while seeing word pair (spoon cuiller)
  • Correlation with recall was low (r .35)
  • Delayed JoL
  • At the end of list
  • seeing only cue (spoon - ___)
  • Excellent correlation with recall (r .90)
  • 2nd graders and old adults also provide good
    delayed JoL

Nelson Dunlosky, 1991
8
  • So it seems that we (mis)use the target to assess
    the cue effectiveness
  • To directly test this idea
  • Water ocean
  • Chicken penguin
  • (nelson Koriat)

9
  • Mnemonic cues cues that give rise to the
    feeling of an item having been encoded.
  • Two types of mnemonic cues
  • Intrinsic cues Properties of the items that
    (subjects believe to) influence memory (e.g.,
    high vs. low frequency words)
  • Extrinsic cues Conditions of the task that
    (subjects believe to) influence memory (e.g.,
    repetition)
  • Subjects underestimate some cues (e.g,
    repetition)
  • Subjects incorrectly believe that low frequency
    words would be harder to recognize than high
    frequency ones

10
Relation between JoL study time
  • Can Judgment of Learning control how long we
    study?1
  • - Study English - French pairs - Pen - Stylo
  • - Free allocation of study time
  • - Make a JoL - How likely will you recall
    stylo when presented with Pen?
  • -Test - Pen ________
  •  Findings
  • 1. students allocated more study time to items
    which were judged to be more difficult.
  • 2. still remembered more of the easy ones
    (labor-in-vain).  Did not compensate adequately
    for difficulty
  • 1what is the causal effect of conscious
    experience on behavior?

(Nelson Leonesio, 1988)
11
Relation between JoL study choice
  • Can we use Judgment of Learning to effectively
    choose what to study?
  • Two types of essay (within-subject)
  • - easy (e.g., why we need to take vitamins)
  • - hard (post-modern interpretations of
    neo-classical fiction)
  • Amount of study time available
  • - One group was given a limited amount of time
  • - The other group was given a great deal of
    time
  • Results Adaptive use of study time.
  • When time limited subjects focused on easy
    items
  • when time unlimited focus on hard items
  • Original study with Ivy League students
    replicated with Inner City Public schools in NY
    (6th grade)

Son and Metcalfe (2000)
12
Feeling of Knowing (FoK)
  • Recall What is the capital of Australia?
    ____
  • FoK Judgment I am __ sure I will recognize
    its name
  • Recognition Is it
  • A)Sydney B) Melbourne C) Canberra
    D) Perth
  • FoK accuracy usually ranges from .35 to .60
  • Similar range for 6-y olds for older adults

13
Tip of the Tongue (ToT)
  • ToT I know this word and I will retrieve it
    soon
  • - What is the last name of the first person to
    set foot on the moon?
  • - What is the name of the large flightless bird
    from Africa?
  • - What is the name of the religious group from
    Northern India whose men where large turbans
    wrapped around their head?
  • ToT
  • correlates with recall recognition
  • correlates with partial information about the
    target
  • but these correlations are far from perfect
  • ToT seems to be caused by the familiarity of the
    topic and the accessibility of partial
    information
  • The same metaphor is used in many languages

14
Monitoring and control processes in free-report
memory performance
  • Performance in memory tasks depends on
  • Memory per se
  • Memory monitoring (i.e., the subjective
    assessment that the answer that comes to mind is
    correct)
  • Memory control (e.g., decide to report or
    withhold the answer based on confidence and
    consequences)
  • Examples
  • - answer 4 out of 5 questions the student
    with better metacognitive skills will do better
    (other things being equal).
  • - multiple choice is there penalty or not?
  • - memoirs vs. jury In a capital punishment
    case we may withhold memories that we deem
    acceptable to voice in a memoir, because in the
    former the potential cost of error is high

15
Koriat Goldsmith, 1996
  • report option
  • accuracy incentive

Input Question
Situational demands/ Payoff
retrieve
Set Response criterion Probability (Prc)
monitor
yes
report
Best candidate answer
Assessed Probability (Pa)
withhold
no
Retrieval
Monitoring
Performance
Control
16
Factors that contribute to free-report memory
performance
  • Overall retention (memory per se)
  • Monitoring effectiveness the extent to which the
    assessed probabilities successfully differentiate
    correct from incorrect candidate answers.()
  • Control sensitivity the extent to which
    withholding or volunteering is in fact based on
    monitoring output
  • Response criterion setting whether the
    probability threshold is set in accordance with
    the payoff schedule.
  • Being able to distinguish what you know from
    what you dont know.

17
  • Testing the model (Koriat Goldsmith,
    1996, exp. 1)
  • General knowledge questions
  • Phase 1
  • Forced-report (forced recall)
  • Confidence rate
  • Phase 2 (same items)
  • Free report (free recall)
  • Half subjects with high accuracy incentive
    (penalty)
  • Results
  • Good monitoring control
  • high correlation between accuracy in forced
    recall and confidence rate
  • Very high correlation between confidence and
    report in phase 2
  • Adaptive response criterion
  • People withhold more items when penalty (but
    there was a quantity/accuracy trade-off)

18
  • Testing the model (Koriat Goldsmith,
    1996, exp. 2)
  • Same method, except that
  • Monitoring was manipulated with two types of
    items
  • Typical items (good confidence-accuracy
    correlation)
  • Deceiving items (items people are usually sure
    and wrong)
  • What is the capital of Australia?
  • Results
  • Unlike the good monitoring condition (typical
    items) for the bad monitoring condition
    (deceiving items)
  • free-report did little to increase accuracy, and
  • the accuracy-quantity tradeoff was much larger
    than for typical items
  • Monitoring might also be impaired
  • in special populations Children, Korsakoff,
    frontal patients.
  • Due to priming

19
  • Goldsmith koriat toronto 05
  • Underconfidence with practice
  • Water-ocean
  • Study times

20
Witness testimony
  • While deliberating, jurors rely upon their
    memories of the trial (availability heuristic)
  • Jurors who are very confident about their
    memories have the largest impact during
    deliberation (Kassin Wrightsman, 1988)
  • But is that likely to be more convincing
  • However, this is based on the assumption that
    confidence is correlated with accuracy, is it?

21
Witness testimony (contd)
  • Open ended questioning and free recall are
    preferable to direct questioning and recognition
    tests, which tend to contaminate memories.
  • Witnesses should be reassured that I dont
    remember is an acceptable answer.
  • See Hunt Ellis textbook

22
  • EOL inferential (performance predicition)
  • Prediction of ones memory span
  • 5 y-old are overconfident
  • May be due to unfamiliarity (much better in how
    far they can jump)
  • At grade 4, improve calibration due in second
    prediction (but not at grade 3)
  • May be kids confound predicition with wishful
    thinking (what I want to get), as they do better
    in predicting others performance

23
Cues to FoK
24
Metamemory affects memory performance
  • Imagine a multiple choice test in which
  • There are 5 choices
  • 1 point if answer is correct
  • 0 point if there is no answer (omission)
  • -.25 point if error
  • Instructions wild guesses will be penalized,
  • Problems
  • Instructions are vague
  • what counts as wild
  • Cultural, gender, personality biases in risk
    taking (control)
  • Even with precise instructions there may be
    individual differences in monitoring (e.g.,
    overconfident)

25
  • Are most confident jurors also the most reliable
    ones?
  • view videotape of actual murder trial
  • make a global JoL (I will remember __ of events
    in the trial)
  • Answer questions about the trial provide a
    confidence judgment for each answer
  • Results
  • JoL did not correlate with accuracy of response
  • More confident jurors speak up (even though their
    accuracy is no better than others accuracy)
  • This may explain why deliberation does not
    enhance accuracy
  • May also occur in study groups, in which the
    overconfident pre-med guy runs the show despite
    not having done the readings ?

Pritchard Keenan, 1999, JEPApplied
26
Confidence judgments
  • An example of a confidence judgment is when you
    mark a question in the MC exam so you can go back
    to it at a later time
  • The typical procedure is to ask a general
    knowledge question in a multiple choice format
  • What is the capital of North Carolina? A.
    Charlotte, B. Raleigh
  • Provide a confidence judgment 50 guessing
    100 certain
  • Confidence is positively correlated with accuracy
    (resolution), but

27
Calibration of judgments
  • Calibration mean judgment mean performance
  • For confidence judgments
  • There is over-confidence in hard items and
  • There is under- confidence in easy ones
  • People are poorly calibrated, suggesting they are
    insensitive to how much they know, but why?
  • One possibility is confirmation bias People
    might consider reasons why an answer may be
    correct and fail to consider why the answer might
    be wrong
  • When people are asked to provide reasons why
    their answer might be incorrect, their judgment
    becomes much better calibrated (koriat 80)

28
JoL FoK
  • Are JoL FoK based on the same info? Is r gt 0?
  • 20 paired associates, cued recall, learnt to
    criterion
  • Half the pairs needed to be recalled correctly
    once
  • The other half needed to be recalled 4 times
    (overlearnt)
  • After item reached criterion -gt immediate JoL
    (affected by overlearning)
  • 4 week retention interval
  • Recall test (better for overlearnt items)
    (relative acc of JoL .3)
  • FoK to each non-recalled item (unaffected by
    overlearning relative acc of FoK .2)
  • Recognition test of non-recalled items
  • Correlation bt JoL FoK .17 (very low)

Leonesio Nelson, 1990
29
How do we come up with a metamemory judgment? The
Direct-Access Hypothesis
  • Things that we store in our mind have a memory
    trace
  • Some things have stronger trace than others
  • Our JoL, FoK, confidence judgments are based on
    those traces.
  • In the case of the FoK we cannot access a memory
    but even in those cases we can experience the
    trace.

30
Evidence against the Direct-Access Hypothesis
  • general knowledge questions, followed by FoK, and
    recognition of unrecalled items
  • Two types of questions
  • Standard items
  • relative accuracy of FoK was .35
  • In other words, FoK predicted recognition
  • Deceiving items (e.g. name the capital of
    California
  • relative accuracy of FoK was 0
  • In other words, people were bad at predicting
    recognition

Koriat, 1995
31
More evidence against the Direct-Access Hypothesis
  • Trivia questions (semantic memory)
  • Answers were grouped based on how long it took
    subjects to respond (a proxy for difficulty)
  • Easy items required little processing of the
    event (episodic memory)
  • Hard items required more elaboration (deeper
    processing)
  • Immediate JoL re free recall in 20 mins
  • Test Free recall of answers (episodic recall)
  • Because Hard items required deeper processing,
    they are better recalled!
  • If subjects relied on direct-access, harder items
    should receive higher JoL (but they dont!)
  • This suggests subjects relied in an effort
    heuristic (hard -gt low)

Benjamin, Bjork, Schwartz, 1998
32
More evidence against the Direct-Access Hypothesis
  • List of Words
  • High frequency words
  • Low frequency words Which type will be better
    recognized?
  • Immediate JoL re recognition
  • Recognition Test
  • Low frequency words are easier to recognized
  • If subjects relied on direct-access, low
    frequency words should receive higher JoL (but
    they dont!)
  • This suggests subjects relied on (incorrect)
    beliefs about the effect of word frequency

Benjamin, , 1998
33
Cue-Familiarity Hypothesis of metacognitive
judgments
  • FoK are based on familiarity with the cue
    (question), rather than memory traces of the
    target (answer)
  • If FoK is high, then people attempt target
    retrieval
  • Since cue familiarity is likely to be related to
    target familiarity, it is somewhat predictive
    (thus the finding of FoK relative accuracy)
  • Priming subjects with the cues leads to increased
    FoK (without increased in recognition)

Reder, 1987
34
Accessibility Hypothesis of metacognitive
judgments
  • FoK are based on accessibility of the target
  • It is different from direct access hypothesis in
    that
  • Information IS accessed
  • The accessed information need not to be accurate
    (tricky questions)
  • the fluency with which the information is
    accessed is important (e.g., trivia study,
    Benjamin et al.)

Koriat, 1993
35
Cue-Familiarity vs. Target Accessibility
hypotheses
  • Proactive interference task with three conditions
  • AB AB familiar cue fluent access to target
  • AD AB familiar cue difficult access to target
  • CD AB novel cue modest access to target
  • Test
  • Paired associate recall
  • FoK for incorrectly recalled items
  • Recognition test
  • Results favored cue-familiarity hypotheses
  • However, both hypotheses may be true as they are
    not mutually incompatible. Cue-familiarity acts
    first, if high then people attempt retrieval,
    point at which accessibility influences FoK

Metcalfe, Schwartz, Joaquim 1993
36
How well do students judge their learning?
  • Study a paragraph
  • Make a global JoL
  • Recall
  • Low correlation (.27)

37
Inputs for metamemory judgments
  • Immediate JoL
  • Ease of processing during study (begg et al,
    1989 Hertzog et al, 2003 Jeplmc29, 22-34)
  • How related cue target are (koriat, 1997)
  • FoK
  • Cue familiarity (reder)
  • Accessibility of partial information
  • SEE VERY IMPORTANT FIGURE 8.5, WHICH INCLUDES ALL
    TYPES OF INPUTS

38
Inputs for JoL
  • Aspects of study processes
  • Imagery vs. repetition
  • Ease of processing
  • Item characteristics
  • Pair relatedness
  • Concrete or abstract words
  • Item frequency/familiarity
  • Context of study
  • Number of study trials
  • Serial position of items
  • Luminance of items

39
Inputs for Confidence Judgment
  • For recalled items
  • Latency of recall
  • Item characteristics
  • Pair relatedness
  • For non-recalled items (also used in FoK)
  • Cue familiarity (reder)
  • Accessibility to partial information (koriat)
  • For recognition task
  • Latency of recognition
  • Cue familiarity
  • Recollecting an episode in which the item has
    been learnt
  • Reasons given why answer may be wrong
  • Resons given why answer may be right

40
  • In sum, metamemory judgments are modestly related
    to performance (e.g, FoK relative accuracy . 35).
  • However, this is not due to some misterious
    direct-access to trace
  • Rather, it is due to use of inputs (cues) which
    have varying degrees of predictiveness about the
    target, from very low (e.g. deceptive items,
    false beliefs on importance of word frequency) to
    more positive (true relation between target and
    cue)

41
  • FoK is greatly impaired in Korsakoff (Shimamura

42
JoL study time
  • Intuitively, it makes sense that people will
    spend more time studying those items that they
    believed have not yet mastered (i.e., low JoL
    items) (see Son Metcalfe 2000 for an exhaustive
    review)
  • Discrepancy-Reduction Hypothesis
  • There is a goal state and a current state, and
    people try to minimize the distance between
    current and goal states.
  • But people also use context. So if you are short
    for time, you will devote that time to easier
    items than to harder ones (Thiede Dunlosky,
    1999).
  • People also sometimes focus on items of
    intermediate difficulty (Metcalfe, 2002)

43
  • I think that in our study with Aaron what we need
    to do is to find an input that we can predict
    will be used for the JoL (e.g., ease of reading,
    see Hertzog 2003) or alternatively, look for a
    measure (delayed JoL) that we think will be
    affected by proactive interference.
  • As it is now, why would PI affect immediate JoL??
    Sounds silly
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