Cja. Moulin et al., The effects of repetition on allocation of study time and judgements of learning in Alzheimer's disease, NEUROPSYCHO, 38(6), 2000, pp. 748-756
Greene et al. [12] suggest that Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients approach
repeated trials in a learning test as if they are single unrelated trials.
Previous research [7] indicates that AD patients do not have explicit memor
y for item repetition when asked at test how many limes a word was presente
d, but they do show benefits of repeated presentation in implicit tasks. Tn
this experiment we examine metacognitive judgements made during study for
repeated items. It was hypothesised that a lack of awareness of repetition
may exacerbate the episodic memory impairment found in AD. To explore this,
two measures of metamemory were taken For items presented once, twice or t
hree times in a list: judgements of learning (JOLs), which are a declaratio
n of how well an item has been learned, and recall readiness, which is the
study time allocated by participants to ensure proficient learning of an it
em. With repetition, age matched controls made recall readiness judgements
more quickly and reported higher JOLs. The AD patients showed faster recall
readiness, but did not alter their. JOLs. This suggests a dissociation in
the AD group between judgements of learning and the allocation of study tim
e. We discuss the implications for theories of the learning deficit in AD,
and the use of metamemory measurements in clinical populations. (C) 2000 El
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