Project Details
The Role of Feedback for the Testing Effect
Applicant
Dr. Oliver Kliegl
Subject Area
General, Cognitive and Mathematical Psychology
Term
from 2015 to 2017
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 281818100
The testing effect refers to the finding that retrieval practice in comparison to restudy of previously encoded material typically improves recall performance on a later test. This beneficial effect of retrieval practice typically arises in the absence of any re-exposure to the study material via feedback. A very recent single study, however, has demonstrated that thetesting effect can be reversed when such feedback is provided during the later test. This finding suggests that the benefit of retrieval practice may not easily generalize to situations in which feedback is provided. The goal of the present research project is to specify the conditions under which providing feedback promotes recall of previously practiced material, and under which conditions it does not. In particular, on the basis of Kornell, Bjork, and Garcia's (2011) bifurcation model of the testing effect, the hypothesis is tested that types of practice which initially result in a relatively weak recall performance will benefit more from feedback than types of practice that initially generate a superior recall performance. The present research project intends to examine the hypothesis in 3 experiments, in each of which one type of practice is employed that initially produces low recall performance, as well as one type of practice that initially produces high recall performance. Specifically, recall performance will be modulated byeither manipulating difficulty of retrieval practice (Experiment 1), the length of the retention interval between retrieval practice and the later test (Experiment 2), and by either inducing retroactive interference, or not (Experiment 3). The expected results may provide a new perspective on the testing effect and demonstrate the critical role of feedback for the effects of different forms of retrieval practice.
DFG Programme
Research Fellowships
International Connection
USA