Learning errors from fiction: difficulties in reducing reliance on fictional stories.
Readers rely on fiction as a source of information, even when fiction contradicts relatively well-known facts about the world (Marsh, Meade, and Roediger, 2003). Of interest was whether readers could monitor fiction for errors, in order to reduce suggestibility. In Experiment 1, warnings about errors in fiction did not reduce students' reliance on stories. In Experiment 2, all subjects were warned before reading stories written at 6th- or 12th-grade reading levels. Even though 6th-grade stories freed resources for monitoring, suggestibility was not reduced. In Experiment 3, suggestibility was reduced but not eliminated when subjects pressed a key each time they detected an error during story reading. Readers do not appear to spontaneously monitor fiction for its veracity, but can do so if reminded on a trial-by-trial basis.
Duke Scholars
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- Suggestion
- Set, Psychology
- Reality Testing
- Reading
- Mental Recall
- Knowledge of Results, Psychological
- Imagination
- Humans
- Fantasy
- Experimental Psychology
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Suggestion
- Set, Psychology
- Reality Testing
- Reading
- Mental Recall
- Knowledge of Results, Psychological
- Imagination
- Humans
- Fantasy
- Experimental Psychology