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Evidence of metacognitive awareness in young children who have experienced a repeated event

journal contribution
posted on 2005-12-01, 00:00 authored by K Roberts, Martine Powell
Two studies examined children's confidence judgments in the accuracy of their memories after repeated experience of an event. Children aged 5 to 6 years took part in an event once or four times, were provided with misinformation either shortly after (Study 1) or a while after (Study 2), and interviewed with yes/no recognition questions 3 months later. Children in the repeated-experience conditions were highly confident of their accurate responses to questions about items that were identical rather than variable across occurrences, and this discrimination was best at the shorter delay. The results show that children were able to metacognitively monitor the accuracy of their responses to qualitatively different kinds of details, and indicate that age is not the only determinant of metacognitive awareness after being misled. Rather, the nature of event representations must also be considered.

History

Journal

Applied cognitive psychology

Volume

19

Issue

8

Pagination

1019 - 1031

Publisher

John Wiley and Sons Ltd

Location

Chichester, England

ISSN

0888-4080

eISSN

1099-0720

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2005, John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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