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Errorful learning improves recognition memory for new vocabulary for people living with memory and dysexecutive impairment following brain injury.

Josie BriscoeJoanna DohertyKaty V BurgessChristopher Kent
Published in: Neuropsychological rehabilitation (2023)
A widely accepted view is that errorless learning is essential for supporting new learning in people with anterograde amnesia, but findings are mixed for those with a broader range of memory impairments. People at a chronic stage of recovery from brain injury (BI) with impaired memory and executive function ( N  = 26) were compared with adults in a comparison group without any known risks to brain function ( N  = 25). Learning techniques were compared using a "Generate-and-correct" and "Read-only" condition when learning novel word pairs. At test, both groups scored above chance and showed benefits of Generate-and-correct (error ful learning). Poor learners in the BI group were classified from "flat" learning slopes extracted from an independent word-pair learning task. Critically, poor learners showed no benefit, but also no decrement to learning, using the Generate-and-correct method. No group was harmed by errorful learning; all, except the poorest learners, benefitted from errorful learning. This study indicates, that in some rehabilitation settings, encouraging clients to guess the meaning of unfamiliar material (e.g., from cards, magazines, newspapers) and then correct their errors, could have benefits for recognition memory. Determining when and how errorful learning benefits learning is a key aim for future research.
Keyphrases
  • brain injury
  • subarachnoid hemorrhage
  • working memory
  • emergency department
  • multiple sclerosis
  • electronic health record
  • advanced cancer