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Original Articles

The effect of information distribution on collaborative inhibition

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Pages 417-428 | Received 17 Aug 2010, Accepted 20 Apr 2011, Published online: 30 Jun 2011
 

Abstract

Two experiments examined collaborative memory for information that was studied by all group members (shared items) and information that was studied by only a subset of group members (unshared items). In both experiments significant collaborative inhibition (reduced output of the collaborative groups relative to the pooled output of individuals) was obtained for both shared and unshared information. In Experiment 1 the magnitude of collaborative inhibition was larger for unshared items than for shared items, possibly because unshared items were less likely to be acknowledged and thus incorporated into the groups’ recall. In Experiment 2 the magnitude of collaborative inhibition for shared and unshared information was equivalent once all participants were provided with the category name associated with the shared and unshared items. The results of the experiments are discussed in relation to the retrieval strategy disruption hypothesis of collaborative inhibition and the role of social process variables, such as acknowledgement, in influencing collaborative inhibition across situations involving memory of shared and unshared information.

Acknowledgements

We thank Suparna Rajaram and Sarah Barber for helpful discussions regarding these experiments, and Stacy Bowden, Jenine Handley, Eric Hansen, and Krista Manley for help with running participants.

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