Older and younger adults' revision of health misconceptions

被引:3
作者
Sitzman, Danielle M. [1 ]
Rheams, James [1 ]
Babineau, Addison L. [2 ]
Tauber, Sarah K. [2 ]
机构
[1] Eastern Washington Univ, Dept Psychol, Cheney, WA 99004 USA
[2] Texas Christian Univ, Dept Psychol, Ft Worth, TX 76129 USA
关键词
Aging; knowledge revision; error correction; misconceptions; older adults; HIGH-CONFIDENCE ERRORS; AGE-DIFFERENCES; KNOWLEDGE; MEMORY; HYPERCORRECTION; ACCESS; METAANALYSIS; INFORMATION; FAMILIARITY; RETRIEVAL;
D O I
10.1080/09658211.2021.1999981
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Although ample younger adult research has detailed effective strategies for revising misconceptions, research with older adults is less extensive. Older adults may be less able to correct errors in knowledge due to age-related changes in cognition, but it is also possible that older adults' revision of misconceptions has been limited by methodologies which do not provide adequate support for correction. In two experiments, we examined how older and younger adults revise health-related misconceptions when provided with cognitive support in the form of explicit detailed feedback and an immediate test. Older and younger adults in Experiment 1 answered true/false health statements, received feedback with a detailed explanation of the correct response, took an additional test on the same statements immediately following the initial test, and completed a final test 1-week later. Older and younger adults corrected a similar proportion of misconceptions immediately and maintained most of those revisions across a 1-week delay. In Experiment 2, older adults corrected the same proportion of misconceptions on the final test regardless of whether or not they received a test immediately following feedback. Overall, older adults revised health misconceptions as effectively as did younger adults but variables influencing correction (e.g., belief in feedback) may differ.
引用
收藏
页码:172 / 189
页数:18
相关论文
共 62 条
[1]   Myth-busting is a bust for patient education: Making salient older adults' misconceptions about osteoarthritis fails to lead to lasting corrections [J].
Ansburg, Pamela I. .
EDUCATIONAL GERONTOLOGY, 2016, 42 (05) :330-341
[2]   Gorilla in our midst: An online behavioral experiment builder [J].
Anwyl-Irvine, Alexander L. ;
Massonnie, Jessica ;
Flitton, Adam ;
Kirkham, Natasha ;
Evershed, Jo K. .
BEHAVIOR RESEARCH METHODS, 2020, 52 (01) :388-407
[3]   PREVENTIVE AND CORRECTIVE MAINTENANCE OF ACCESS TO KNOWLEDGE [J].
BAHRICK, HP ;
HALL, LK .
APPLIED COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY, 1991, 5 (01) :1-18
[4]   Stabilizing access to marginal and submarginal knowledge [J].
Berger, SA ;
Hall, LK ;
Bahrick, HP .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-APPLIED, 1999, 5 (04) :438-447
[5]   Aging in an Era of Fake News [J].
Brashier, Nadia M. ;
Schacter, Daniel L. .
CURRENT DIRECTIONS IN PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 2020, 29 (03) :316-323
[6]   Competing Cues: Older Adults Rely on Knowledge in the Face of Fluency [J].
Brashier, Nadia M. ;
Umanath, Sharda ;
Cabeza, Roberto ;
Marsh, Elizabeth J. .
PSYCHOLOGY AND AGING, 2017, 32 (04) :331-337
[7]   Meta-analysis of the relationship between risk perception and health behavior: The example of vaccination [J].
Brewer, Noel T. ;
Chapman, Gretchen B. ;
Gibbons, Frederick X. ;
Gerrard, Meg ;
McCaul, Kevin D. ;
Weinstein, Neil D. .
HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY, 2007, 26 (02) :136-145
[8]   Errors committed with high confidence are hypercorrected [J].
Butterfield, B ;
Metcalfe, J .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-LEARNING MEMORY AND COGNITION, 2001, 27 (06) :1491-1494
[9]  
Butterfield B, 2006, Metacogn Learn, V1, P69, DOI [10.1007/s11409-006-6894-z, DOI 10.1007/S11409-006-6894-Z]
[10]   Multiple-choice tests stabilize access to marginal knowledge [J].
Cantor, Allison D. ;
Eslick, Andrea N. ;
Marsh, Elizabeth J. ;
Bjork, Robert A. ;
Bjork, Elizabeth Ligon .
MEMORY & COGNITION, 2015, 43 (02) :193-205