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Weak memory for future-oriented feedback : investigating the roles of attention and improvement focus

Gregory, SEA; Winstone, NE; Ridout, N; Nash, RA

Weak memory for future-oriented feedback : investigating the roles of attention and improvement focus Thumbnail


Authors

NE Winstone

N Ridout

RA Nash



Abstract

Recent research showed that people recall past-oriented, evaluative feedback more fully and accurately than future-oriented, directive feedback. Here we investigated whether these memory biases arise from preferential attention toward evaluative feedback during encoding. We also attempted to counter the biases via manipulations intended to focus participants on improvement. Participants received bogus evaluative and directive feedback on their writing. Before reading the feedback, some participants set goals for improvement (experiments 1 and 2), or they wrote about their past or future use of the writing skills, and/or were incentivised to improve (experiment 3); we objectively measured participants’ attention during feedback reading using eyetracking. Finally, all participants completed a recall test. We successfully replicated the preferential remembering of evaluative feedback, but found little support for an attentional explanation. Goal-setting reduced participants’ tendency to reproduce feedback in an evaluative style, but not their preferential remembering of evaluative feedback. Neither orienting participants toward their past or future use of the writing skills, nor incentivising them to improve, influenced their attention toward or memory for the feedback. These findings advance the search for a mechanism to explain people's weaker memory for future-oriented feedback, demonstrating that attentional and improvement-oriented accounts cannot adequately explain the effect.

Citation

Gregory, S., Winstone, N., Ridout, N., & Nash, R. (2020). Weak memory for future-oriented feedback : investigating the roles of attention and improvement focus. Memory, 28(2), 216-236. https://doi.org/10.1080/09658211.2019.1709507

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Dec 20, 2019
Online Publication Date Dec 30, 2019
Publication Date Jan 1, 2020
Deposit Date Oct 28, 2021
Publicly Available Date Oct 28, 2021
Journal Memory
Print ISSN 0965-8211
Electronic ISSN 1464-0686
Publisher Routledge
Volume 28
Issue 2
Pages 216-236
DOI https://doi.org/10.1080/09658211.2019.1709507
Publisher URL https://doi.org/10.1080/09658211.2019.1709507
Related Public URLs http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/titles/09658211.asp
Additional Information Access Information : This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis Group in Memory on 30 Dec 2019, available online at: http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/09658211.2019.1709507

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