Abstract

The influence of question framing (i.e., [was the item] “old?” or “new?”) on recognition memory and event-related potentials (ERPs) was investigated. Words were encoded using a shallow task to create a weak memory trace that was more susceptible to test question framing effects. Participants made yes/no judgments on two, counterbalanced tests. One test focused on old items (“old?”), whereas the other test focused on new items (“new?”). The behavioral evidence suggested that the weak memory traces led to more familiarity-based recognition judgments with a concentrated effect on decision criterion. There were some small ERP changes on the FN400 or LPC consistent with the criterion changes, but the test query did not directly alter these ERP components. Instead, the test query altered a late old/new ERP difference similar to the “right frontal old/new effect” reported in source monitoring ERP studies. When the query was “new?”, old items elicited more positive ERPs, whereas there was no old/new difference when the query was “old?”. The results suggest that the query framing induces memory biases that occur late in the stream of processing. More generally, the results indicate that decision criterion must be accounted for when interpreting physiological correlates of recognition memory.

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