Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
927543 Consciousness and Cognition 2015 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Access to the Internet decreases willingness to volunteer answers to questions.•Access to the Internet can increase the quality of information in memory reports.•Access to the Internet can decrease the quantity of information in memory reports.•Feeling-of-knowing can be lower when Internet access is available.•Internet access can affect processes of metacognitive monitoring and control.

Recent technological advances have given rise to an information-gathering tool unparalleled by any in human history—the Internet. Understanding how access to such a powerful informational tool influences how we think represents an important question for psychological science. In the present investigation we examined the impact of access to the Internet on the metacognitive processes that govern our decisions about what we “know” and “don’t know.” Results demonstrated that access to the Internet influenced individuals’ willingness to volunteer answers, which led to fewer correct answers overall but greater accuracy when an answer was offered. Critically, access to the Internet also influenced feeling-of-knowing, and this accounted for some (but not all) of the effect on willingness to volunteer answers. These findings demonstrate that access to the Internet can influence metacognitive processes, and contribute novel insights into the operation of the transactive memory system formed by people and the Internet.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Neuroscience Cognitive Neuroscience
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