Research Topics
| Chad S DodsonSummaryAffiliation: University of Virginia Country: USA Publications
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Detail Information
Publications
Retrieval-based illusory recollections: why study-test contextual changes impair source memoryChad S Dodson
Department of Psychology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia 22904 4400, USA
Mem Cognit 35:1211-21. 2007....
Alzheimer's disease and memory-monitoring impairment: Alzheimer's patients show a monitoring deficit that is greater than their accuracy deficitChad S Dodson
Department of Psychology, P O Box 400400, 102 Gilmer Hall, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22904 4400, USA
Neuropsychologia 49:2609-18. 2011..We discuss the brain correlates of this memory-monitoring deficit and also propose a Remembrance-Evaluation model of memory-monitoring...
Stereotypes and retrieval-provoked illusory source recollectionsChad S Dodson
Department of Psychology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22904, USA
J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn 34:460-77. 2008....
Aging, metamemory, and high-confidence errors: a misrecollection accountChad S Dodson
Department of Psychology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22904 4400, USA
Psychol Aging 22:122-33. 2007....
I misremember it well: why older adults are unreliable eyewitnessesChad S Dodson
Department of Psychology, University of Virginia, 102 Gilmer Hall, Charlottesville 22904 4400, USA
Psychon Bull Rev 13:770-5. 2006..The elderly adults' propensity to make high-confidence errors fits our misrecollection account...
Aging, source memory, and misrecollectionsChad S Dodson
Department of Psychology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22904 4400, USA
J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn 33:169-81. 2007..Instead, older adults appear to misremember past events more often than younger adults...
Speeded retrieval abolishes the false-memory suppression effect: evidence for the distinctiveness heuristicChad S Dodson
Department of Psychology, P O Box 400400, 102 Gilmer Hall, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22904 4400, USA
Psychon Bull Rev 12:726-31. 2005..These results are consistent with the distinctiveness heuristic that a time-consuming retrieval strategy is used to reduce false-recognition responses...
Aging and strategic retrieval processes: reducing false memories with a distinctiveness heuristicChad S Dodson
Department of Psychology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville 22904, USA
Psychol Aging 17:405-15. 2002..Studying pictures provided a basis for using a distinctiveness heuristic during the recognition test: Individuals inferred that the absence of memory for picture information indicates that an item is "new."..
Why distinctive information reduces false memories: evidence for both impoverished relational-encoding and distinctiveness heuristic accountsAmanda C G Hege
Department of Psychology, University of Virginia, 102 Gilmer Hall, Charlottesville, VA 22904, USA
J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn 30:787-95. 2004..However, the results from a postrecall recognition test provide evidence in favor of the distinctiveness heuristic...
Specific- and partial-source memory: effects of agingJon S Simons
Department of Psychology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA
Psychol Aging 19:689-94. 2004..When the groups were matched on partial-source performance, no disproportionate specific-source impairment was seen. The results suggest that aging does not differentially affect specific- versus partial-source memory...
Metamemory development: understanding the role of similarity in false memoriesVikram K Jaswal
University of Virginia, Department of Psychology, P O Box 400400, Charlottesville, VA 22904 4400, USA
Child Dev 80:629-35. 2009..Six-year-olds, but not 5-year-olds, consistently attributed more similar than dissimilar mistakes to false memories. Understanding the link between similarity and false memories improves significantly between 5 and 6 years of age...
When two heads are not better than one: partner neglect in paired memory tasksOlivia K A Lima
Department of Psychology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia 22904, USA
Psychon Bull Rev 14:88-94. 2007..Only when explicitly instructed to estimate their accuracy relative to their partner's did participants take advantage of the partner's greater expertise...
Support for a continuous (single-process) model of recognition memory and source memoryScott D Slotnick
Department of Psychology, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467, USA
Mem Cognit 33:151-70. 2005..Furthermore, the unequal variance model accounted for both recognition memory and source memory ROCs, supporting a continuous process of memory retrieval...
fMRI evidence for the role of recollection in suppressing misattribution errors: the illusory truth effectJason P Mitchell
Department of Psychology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA
J Cogn Neurosci 17:800-10. 2005....
Metacognition and false recognition in patients with frontal lobe lesions: the distinctiveness heuristicAndrew E Budson
Department of Neurology 4 18F, Brigham and Women s Hospital, Boston, MA 02120, USA
Neuropsychologia 43:860-71. 2005..The authors suggest that the distinctiveness heuristic is a metacognitive strategy, dependent upon the frontal lobes, that may be engaged by healthy individuals to reduce their false recognition...
Metacognition and false recognition in Alzheimer's disease: further exploration of the distinctiveness heuristicAndrew E Budson
Geriatric Research Education Center, Edith Nourse Rogers Memorial Veterans Hospital, Bedford, MA, USA
Neuropsychology 19:253-8. 2005....
Intact suppression of increased false recognition in schizophreniaAnthony P Weiss
Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston 02114, USA
Am J Psychiatry 159:1506-13. 2002..By studying pictures of the target word during encoding, healthy adults can suppress false recognition. This study examined the effect of pictorial encoding on subsequent recognition of repeated foils in patients with schizophrenia...
Electrophysiological dissociation of picture versus word encoding: the distinctiveness heuristic as a retrieval orientationAndrew E Budson
Edith Nourse Rogers Memorial Veterans Hospital, Bedford, MA 01730, and Boston University, Boston, MA, USA
J Cogn Neurosci 17:1181-93. 2005....
