TY - JOUR
T1 - Shared and distinct cue utilization for metacognitive judgements during reasoning and memorisation
AU - Ackerman, Rakefet
AU - Beller, Yael
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2017/10/2
Y1 - 2017/10/2
N2 - Metacognitive research is dominated by meta-memory studies; meta-reasoning research is nascent. Accessibility–the number of associations for a stimulus–is a reliable heuristic cue for Feeling of Knowing when answering knowledge questions. We used a similar cue, subjective accessibility, for exposing commonalities and differences between meta-reasoning and meta-memory. In Experiment 1, participants faced solvable Compound Remote Associate problems mixed with unsolvable random word triads. We collected initial Judgement of Solvability (iJOS), final JOS (fJOS) and confidence. Experiment 2 focused on confidence, controlling for potential interactions among judgements. In Experiment 3, the participants memorised the same triads and rated Ease of Learning and Judgement of Learning. sAccessibility was associated with all judgements. Notably, it reliably predicted memory judgements and confidence in the provided solutions. However, it was unreliable for judging solvability (iJOS and fJOS). The findings highlight the importance of studying meta-reasoning for exposing the biasing factors in reasoning processes and for getting a broad perspective on metacognitive processes.
AB - Metacognitive research is dominated by meta-memory studies; meta-reasoning research is nascent. Accessibility–the number of associations for a stimulus–is a reliable heuristic cue for Feeling of Knowing when answering knowledge questions. We used a similar cue, subjective accessibility, for exposing commonalities and differences between meta-reasoning and meta-memory. In Experiment 1, participants faced solvable Compound Remote Associate problems mixed with unsolvable random word triads. We collected initial Judgement of Solvability (iJOS), final JOS (fJOS) and confidence. Experiment 2 focused on confidence, controlling for potential interactions among judgements. In Experiment 3, the participants memorised the same triads and rated Ease of Learning and Judgement of Learning. sAccessibility was associated with all judgements. Notably, it reliably predicted memory judgements and confidence in the provided solutions. However, it was unreliable for judging solvability (iJOS and fJOS). The findings highlight the importance of studying meta-reasoning for exposing the biasing factors in reasoning processes and for getting a broad perspective on metacognitive processes.
KW - Reasoning
KW - heuristic cues
KW - memorisation
KW - meta-reasoning
KW - metacognition
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85019180405&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/13546783.2017.1328373
DO - 10.1080/13546783.2017.1328373
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AN - SCOPUS:85019180405
SN - 1354-6783
VL - 23
SP - 376
EP - 408
JO - Thinking and Reasoning
JF - Thinking and Reasoning
IS - 4
ER -