Discover 5 peer-reviewed studies in Memory (2021–2025). Explore research findings powered by Prolific's diverse participant panel.
This page lists 5 peer-reviewed papers in the research area of Memory in the Prolific Citations Library, a curated collection of research powered by high-quality human data from Prolific.
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Authors: KO Alberts, AD Castel
Year: 2025
Published in: Experimental Aging Research, 2025 - Taylor & Francis
Institution: University of California Los Angeles
Research Area: Cognitive Aging, Associative Memory, Trustworthiness of Artificial Faces, Human-AI Interaction, Psychology, Trust in AI
Discipline: Psychology, Psychobiology, Aging Research
Older adults perceive artificial faces as equally trustworthy as real faces, unlike young adults who find artificial faces less trustworthy, and older adults show no difference in memory accuracy between face types.
Methods: Participants viewed real and artificial faces associated with scam or neutral conditions, then rated trustworthiness and were tested on associative memory.
Key Findings: Associative memory and perceived trustworthiness of real and artificial faces across young and older adults.
Citations: 1
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Authors: M Brassil, É Duncan, C Greene, B Mac Síthigh
Year: 2025
Published in: 2025 - osf.io
Institution: University College Dublin
Research Area: Eyewitness Memory, Misinformation Effect, Behavioral Research Methods, Online Data Collection Platforms
Discipline: Psychology
The study found that data collection contexts significantly influence susceptibility to eyewitness misinformation, with Prolific participants being less accurate and more susceptible compared to Laboratory or general online participants.
Methods: Two studies were conducted comparing eyewitness misinformation susceptibility across Laboratory, Prolific, and General Online participant groups under varying visual perceptual load conditions.
Key Findings: Eyewitness misinformation susceptibility and recall accuracy across Laboratory, Prolific, and General Online participant groups; the effect of visual perceptual load on recall accuracy.
Citations: 1
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Authors: Samantha Chan, Pat Pataranutaporn, Aditya Suri, Wazeer Zulfikar, Pattie Maes
Year: 2024
Published in: ArXiv
Institution: Massachusetts Institute of Technology, University of California
Research Area: Cognitive Psychology, False Memory Research, Human-AI Interaction, Conversational AI
Discipline: Cognitive Psychology, Artificial Intelligence
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Authors: O Raccah, P Chen, TM Gureckis, D Poeppe, VA Vo
Year: 2024
Published in: Nature
Institution: Intel Labs, New York University, Yale University
Research Area: Cognitive Psychology, Memory Research, Natural Language Processing (NLP)
Discipline: Psychology, Artificial Intelligence
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Authors: EL Henderson, DJ Simons, DJ Barr
Year: 2021
Published in: Journal of cognition, 2021 - pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Institution: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Cornell University, University of Rochester, NiH
Research Area: Cognitive Psychology, Illusory Truth Effect, Misinformation, Memory
Discipline: Psychology
Citations: 78