2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.concog.2015.03.016
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A word of warning: Instructions and feedback cannot prevent the revelation effect

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Cited by 8 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…Similarly, the revelation effect-the tendency to call a stimulus more familiar directly following an intervening task such as solving an anagram (e.g., nushines-sunshine) than without an intervening task-is robust against warning instructions (Watkins & Peynircioglu, 1990;Aßfalg & Nadarevic, 2015). The repetition-based truth effect could also be robust against warning instructions, if the fluency-truth attribution process, proposed to underlie the truth effect, is outside of the participants' control.…”
Section: Previous Debiasing Approachesmentioning
confidence: 91%
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“…Similarly, the revelation effect-the tendency to call a stimulus more familiar directly following an intervening task such as solving an anagram (e.g., nushines-sunshine) than without an intervening task-is robust against warning instructions (Watkins & Peynircioglu, 1990;Aßfalg & Nadarevic, 2015). The repetition-based truth effect could also be robust against warning instructions, if the fluency-truth attribution process, proposed to underlie the truth effect, is outside of the participants' control.…”
Section: Previous Debiasing Approachesmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…Further, in Experiment 1, participants in the warning condition might have failed to attend or comprehend the warning instructions altogether. For that reason, Experiment 2 included several control questions, designed to assess participants' comprehension of the warning instructions and to repeat the instructions if necessary (Aßfalg & Nadarevic, 2015). Moreover, to ensure that warned participants focused on the prevention of the truth effect, we kept Experiment 2 as simple as possible: Unlike Experiment 1, there was only a single test phase which directly followed the exposure phase and which did not require source judgments.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…After Westerman and Greene (1996) showed the indirect effect, many researchers confirmed the effect using various cognitive tasks: letter-counting tasks, memory span tests, synonym-generation tasks (Westerman & Greene, 1998), tasks of determining attractiveness ratings for inverted faces (Bornstein & Wilson, 2004), articulatory suppression tasks (Miura & Itoh, 2016), tasks of pressing arrow keys (Aßfalg, Currie, & Bernstein, 2017), revealed tasks (Bornstein & Neely, 2001;Westerman & Greene, 1998), numerical addition tasks (Leynes, Landau, Walker, & Addante, 2005;, and anagram tasks (Aßfalg, Currie et al, 2017;Aßfalg & Nadarevic, 2015;Azimian-Faridani & Wilding, 2004;Bernstein, Rudd, Erdfelder, Godfrey, & Loftus, 2009;Bernstein, Whittlesea, & Loftus, 2002;Cameron & Hockley, 2000;Kronlund & Bernstein, 2006;Major & Hockley, 2007;Miura & Itoh, 2016;Verde & Rotello, 2003Westerman, 2000;Westerman, Miller, & Lloyd, 2017;Young, Peynircioğlu, & Hohman, 2009). While it has been shown that various cognitive tasks cause the revelation effect, few studies have found tasks that do not cause the effect.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In Experiments 1 and 2, participants either solved a new anagram in each task trial (hard condition) or received the same anagram repeatedly (easy condition). Solving an anagram is the most common preceding task in revelation-effect research (e.g., Aßfalg & Nadarevic, 2015). In Experiments 3 and 4, we introduced a novel preceding task in which participants pressed a random sequence of arrow keys on a computer keyboard (hard condition) or pressed the same arrow key repeatedly (easy condition).…”
Section: The Present Studymentioning
confidence: 99%