Abstract

Successful memory typically implies both objective accuracy and subjective confidence, but there are instances when confidence and accuracy diverge. This dissociation suggests that there may be distinct neural patterns of activation related to confidence and accuracy. We used event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging to study the encoding of novel face--name associations, assessed with a postscan memory test that included objective measures of accuracy and subjective measures of confidence. We showed specific neural activity in the left inferior prefrontal cortex associated with trials when subjects expressed high confidence that they had chosen the correct name for the face and made a correct identification. Moreover, we found that this region was also associated with imparting high confidence when subjects chose the incorrect name. However, medial temporal lobe regions showed activity only for high-confidence correct trials. Many functional magnetic resonance imaging studies have shown that the medial temporal lobe and left prefrontal regions are particularly important for the successful formation of memories by using a combination of subjective and objective measures. Our findings suggest that these regions may be differentially involved in the objective and subjective components of memory and that the origins of confidence-accuracy dissociations may be related to incomplete activation of the neural pattern seen in successful encoding. These findings may also aid understanding of eyewitness misidentifications and memory distortions.

Highlights

  • Episodic memory can be assessed in terms of objective accuracy and subjective confidence

  • The contrast all HC > all LC showed a similar pattern of activation to our previous studies of attempted associative encoding (Sperling et al, 2001), engaging bilateral dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC; right = 48, 18, 24; left = À39, 15, 27; p < .001), left ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (VLPFC; À39, 27, À6), bilateral medial temporal lobe (MTL), and bilateral fusiform regions

  • We demonstrated that neural activity during encoding of face–name associations is related to the confidence level expressed during a subsequent memory test

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Summary

Introduction

Episodic memory can be assessed in terms of objective accuracy and subjective confidence. Confidence often weakly predicts accuracy across subjects, there are specific instances when confidence and accuracy diverge, and individuals report. Reports from the eyewitness literature show that confidence and accuracy are generally only weakly related, such that higher. 1131–1142 confidence is only somewhat predictive of accuracy across subjects (for a meta-analysis, see Sporer et al, 1995), yet eyewitnesses who express high confidence in their identifications are very convincing to jurors (Wells et al, 2002; Wells & Olson, 2003). The presentation of misinformation (Belli, Lindsay, Gales, & McCarthy, 1994), confirming feedback (Bradfield et al, 2002), and retrieval effort (Shaw & Zerr, 2003) all tend to increase confidence, but not accuracy for an event and may explain why the relationship between confidence and accuracy is weak in the eyewitness literature

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