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Failure to detect discrepancies drives retrieval-enhanced suggestibility

Abstract

Retrieval-enhanced suggestibility (RES) refers to the finding that immediately recalling the details of a witnessed event can increase susceptibility to later misinformation. In three experiments, we sought to gain a deeper understanding of the role that retrieval plays in susceptibility to misinformation. Consistent with past research, initial testing did increase susceptibility to misinformation—but only for those who failed to detect discrepancies between the original event and the post-event misinformation. In all three experiments, subjects who retrospectively detected discrepancies in the post-event narratives were more resistant to misinformation than those who did not. In Experiments 2 and 3, retrospective detectors who took an initial test were more likely to endorse misinformation than those in the single test condition. These results indicate the complexity of the relationship between retrieval practice, discrepancy detection, and misinformation endorsement.

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