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Plausibility seems to play a key role in how well people remember the veracity of information. In a study by Vorms and colleagues (2022), an interaction pattern between statement plausibility and veracity feedback on memory performance appeared: Plausible statements were significantly more often correctly identified as true than correctly identified as false; for implausible statements, the descriptive trend was reversed. Given the importance of accurate memory for truth and falsity in real-world settings, it is crucial to understand the cognitive processes underlying this plausibility effect. For this purpose, we conducted a preregistered experiment in which participants studied four different statement types along with veracity feedback: plausible true, plausible false, implausible true, and implausible false. In a later recognition test, they indicated whether a statement was presented and, if so, what veracity feedback was displayed. We replicated the plausibility effect as an interaction between statement plausibility and veracity feedback on correct true/false attributions. Moreover, we analysed the data with a multinomial model to estimate the contribution of statement memory, feedback memory, and different guessing processes underlying the observable responses. These analyses revealed that guessing processes and statement memory accounted for the above-mentioned plausibility effect: Feedback guessing was influenced by corresponding statement plausibility, and statement memory was overall better when the veracity feedback aligned with statement plausibility. In contrast, feedback memory was enhanced in the case of a discrepancy between veracity feedback and statement plausibility. These results emphasise the importance of examining the processes driving the plausibility effect to derive correct conclusions.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.5334/joc.459 | DOI Listing |
J Cogn
September 2025
Department of Psychology, School of Social Sciences, University of Mannheim, Mannheim, Germany.
Plausibility seems to play a key role in how well people remember the veracity of information. In a study by Vorms and colleagues (2022), an interaction pattern between statement plausibility and veracity feedback on memory performance appeared: Plausible statements were significantly more often correctly identified as true than correctly identified as false; for implausible statements, the descriptive trend was reversed. Given the importance of accurate memory for truth and falsity in real-world settings, it is crucial to understand the cognitive processes underlying this plausibility effect.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMed Teach
May 2025
School of Education, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia.
Purpose: To compare the structural quality of multiple choice questions (MCQs) generated by a large language model, a type of artificial intelligence (AI), GPT-4, against human-authored items at both novice and expert level.
Methods: We conducted a blinded analysis of 124 MCQs: 40 generated by GPT-4, 39 from human item-writers at Novice level, and 45 from human item-writers at Expert level. A generic prompt for GPT-4 was engineered, which included item-writing guidance, example MCQs, and key learning points.
Psychon Bull Rev
May 2025
Institute of Psychology, Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński University in Warsaw, Warsaw, Poland.
Source memory for truth is usually better than for falsity, and similar effects are observed for important compared with unimportant information. A recently found interaction between information veracity and importance indicates that people effectively prioritize encoding true information (but not false). Yet it is unclear whether the feedback about veracity and importance of the information is integrated into joint memory representation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFConscious Cogn
October 2024
Heidelberg University, Department of Psychology, Hauptstrasse 47-51, 69117, Heidelberg, Germany. Electronic address:
The truthiness effect (Newman et al., 2012) refers to the belief that any particular stimulus is truthful when it is accompanied by nonprobative information (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCan J Cardiol
October 2024
Ted Rogers Centre for Heart Research, Ajmera Transplant Centre, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; Ajmera Transplant Centre, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Electronic address:
As an integral aspect of health care, digital technology has enabled modelling of complex relationships to detect, screen, diagnose, and predict patient outcomes. With massive data sets, artificial intelligence (AI) can have marked effects on 3 levels: for patients, clinicians, and health systems. In this review, we discuss contemporary AI-enabled wearable devices undergoing research in the field of cardiovascular medicine.
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