Trait anxiety does not correlate with metacognitive confidence or reminder usage in a delayed intentions task. Kirk, P. A., Robinson, O. J., & Gilbert, S. J. Quarterly journal of experimental psychology (2006), 74(4):634–644, April, 2021. Place: Englanddoi abstract bibtex Setting external reminders provides a convenient way to reduce cognitive demand and ensure accurate retrieval of information for prospective tasks. Recent experimental evidence has demonstrated that the decision to offload cognitive information to external resources is guided by metacognitive belief, that is, individuals' confidence in their unaided ability. Other work has also suggested a relationship between metacognitive belief and trait anxiety. In the present study (N = 300), we bridged these two areas by investigating whether trait anxiety correlated with metacognitive belief and-consequently-propensity to offload information in a delayed intentions paradigm. Participants received a financial reward based on their ability to remember targets. However, participants could take a reduced reward per target if they decided to use reminders. We replicated previous findings that participants were biased to use more reminders than would be optimal, and this bias was correlated with metacognitive judgements. However, we show no evidence that trait anxiety held a relationship with metacognitive belief or reminder usage. Indeed, Bayesian analyses strongly favoured the null. Therefore, variation in self-reported trait anxiety does not necessarily influence confidence and strategy when participants remember delayed intentions.
@article{kirk_trait_2021,
title = {Trait anxiety does not correlate with metacognitive confidence or reminder usage in a delayed intentions task.},
volume = {74},
copyright = {All rights reserved},
issn = {1747-0226 1747-0218},
doi = {10.1177/1747021820970156},
abstract = {Setting external reminders provides a convenient way to reduce cognitive demand and ensure accurate retrieval of information for prospective tasks. Recent experimental evidence has demonstrated that the decision to offload cognitive information to external resources is guided by metacognitive belief, that is, individuals' confidence in their unaided ability. Other work has also suggested a relationship between metacognitive belief and trait anxiety. In the present study (N = 300), we bridged these two areas by investigating whether trait anxiety correlated with metacognitive belief and-consequently-propensity to offload information in a delayed intentions paradigm. Participants received a financial reward based on their ability to remember targets. However, participants could take a reduced reward per target if they decided to use reminders. We replicated previous findings that participants were biased to use more reminders than would be optimal, and this bias was correlated with metacognitive judgements. However, we show no evidence that trait anxiety held a relationship with metacognitive belief or reminder usage. Indeed, Bayesian analyses strongly favoured the null. Therefore, variation in self-reported trait anxiety does not necessarily influence confidence and strategy when participants remember delayed intentions.},
language = {eng},
number = {4},
journal = {Quarterly journal of experimental psychology (2006)},
author = {Kirk, Peter A. and Robinson, Oliver J. and Gilbert, Sam J.},
month = apr,
year = {2021},
pmid = {33084484},
pmcid = {PMC8044609},
note = {Place: England},
keywords = {*Memory, *Memory, Episodic, *Metacognition, Anxiety, Bayes Theorem, Episodic, Humans, Intention, Memory, Prospective Studies, anxiety, metacognition},
pages = {634--644},
}
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In the present study (N = 300), we bridged these two areas by investigating whether trait anxiety correlated with metacognitive belief and-consequently-propensity to offload information in a delayed intentions paradigm. Participants received a financial reward based on their ability to remember targets. However, participants could take a reduced reward per target if they decided to use reminders. We replicated previous findings that participants were biased to use more reminders than would be optimal, and this bias was correlated with metacognitive judgements. However, we show no evidence that trait anxiety held a relationship with metacognitive belief or reminder usage. Indeed, Bayesian analyses strongly favoured the null. 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