Projects per year
Abstract
Human memory is known to be supported by sleep. However, less is known about the effect of sleep on false memory, where people incorrectly remember events that never occurred. In the laboratory, false memories are often induced via the Deese-Roediger-McDermott (DRM) paradigm where participants are presented with wordlists comprising semantically related words such as nurse, hospital, and sick (studied words). Subsequently, participants are likely to falsely remember that a related lure word such as doctor was presented. Multiple studies have examined whether these false memories are influenced by sleep, with contradictory results. A recent meta-analysis suggests that sleep may increase DRM false memory when short lists are used. We tested this in a registered report (N=488) with a 2 (Interval: Immediate vs. 12-hr Delay) x 2 (Test Time: 9AM vs. 9PM) between-participant DRM experiment, using short DRM lists (N = 8 words/list) and free recall as the memory test. We found an unexpected time-of-day effect such that completing free recall in the evening led to more intrusions (neither studied nor lure words). Above and beyond this time-of-day effect, the Sleep participants produced fewer intrusions than their Wake counterparts. When this was statistically controlled for, the Sleep participants falsely produced more critical lures. They also correctly recalled more studied words (regardless of intrusions). Exploratory analysis showed that these findings cannot be attributed to differences in output bias, as indexed by the number of total responses. Our overall results cannot be fully captured by existing sleep-specific theories of false memory, but help to define the role of sleep in two more general theories (Fuzzy-Trace and Activation/Monitoring theories) and suggest that sleep may benefit gist abstraction/spreading activation on one hand and memory suppression/source monitoring on the other.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Article number | 220595 |
Number of pages | 39 |
Journal | Royal Society Open Science |
Volume | 10 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 6 Dec 2023 |
Projects
- 2 Finished
-
Recollections may vary: How does sleep affect false memory?
Gaskell, G. (Principal investigator) & Mak, M. (Co-investigator)
20/11/21 → 19/11/23
Project: Research project (funded) › Research
-
The underpinnings of linguistic optimisation in comprehension
Gaskell, G. (Principal investigator)
ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL RESEARCH COUNCIL (ESRC)
2/11/20 → 18/05/24
Project: Research project (funded) › Research
Datasets
-
A registered report testing the effect of sleep on DRM false memory: Greater lure and veridical recall but fewer intrusions after sleep
Mak, M. (Creator) & Gaskell, G. (Creator), OSF, 9 Feb 2022
DOI: 10.17605/OSF.IO/9PDYF, https://osf.io/9pdyf/
Dataset