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The effect of forced recall on illusory
recollection in younger and older adults
MICHELLE L. MEADE
University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign
HENRY L. ROEDIGER III
Washington University at St. Louis
The effect of an initial forced recall test on later recall and recognition tests was
examined in younger and older adults. Subjects were presented with categorized
word lists and given an initial test under standard cued recall instructions (with a
warning against guessing) or forced recall instructions (that required guessing);
subjects were later given a cued recall test for the original list items. In 2 experiments,
initial forced recall resulted in higher levels of illusory memories on subsequent
tests (relative to initial cued recall), especially for older adults. Older adults
were more likely to say they remembered rather than knew that forced guesses
had occurred in the original study episode. The effect persisted despite a strong
warning against making errors in Experiment 2. When a source monitoring test
was given, older adults had more difficulty than younger adults in identifying the
source of items they had originally produced as guesses. If conditions encourage
subjects to guess on a first memory test, they are likely to recollect these guesses
as actual memories on later tests. This effect is exaggerated in older adults, probably
because of their greater source monitoring difficulties. Both dual process and
source monitoring theories provide insight into these findings.
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