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      Predicting one's own forgetting: the role of experience-based and theory-based processes.

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          Abstract

          The authors examined the hypothesis that judgments of learning (JOL), if governed by processing fluency during encoding, should be insensitive to the anticipated retention interval. Indeed, neither item-by-item nor aggregate JOLs exhibited "forgetting" unless participants were asked to estimate recall rates for several different retention intervals, in which case their estimates mimicked closely actual recall rates. These results and others reported suggest that participants can access their knowledge about forgetting but only when theory-based predictions are made, and then only when the notion of forgetting is accentuated either by manipulating retention interval within individuals or by framing recall predictions in terms of forgetting rather than remembering. The authors interpret their findings in terms of the distinction between experience-based and theory-based JOLs.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Exp Psychol Gen
          Journal of experimental psychology. General
          0096-3445
          0022-1015
          Dec 2004
          : 133
          : 4
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Psychology, University of Haifa, Haifa, Israel. akoriat@research.haifa.ac.il
          Article
          2004-21166-013
          10.1037/0096-3445.133.4.643
          15584811
          340a5254-d316-4adc-82a0-0f8d6c5d5ddf
          (c) 2004 APA
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