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Dive into the research topics where Justin B. Knight is active.

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Featured researches published by Justin B. Knight.


Memory & Cognition | 2010

Individual differences in event-based prospective memory: Evidence for multiple processes supporting cue detection

Gene A. Brewer; Justin B. Knight; Richard L. Marsh; Nash Unsworth

The multiprocess view proposes that different processes can be used to detect event-based prospective memory cues, depending in part on the specificity of the cue. According to this theory, attentional processes are not necessary to detect focal cues, whereas detection of nonfocal cues requires some form of controlled attention. This notion was tested using a design in which we compared performance on a focal and on a nonfocal prospective memory task by participants with high or low working memory capacity. An interaction was found, such that participants with high and low working memory performed equally well on the focal task, whereas the participants with high working memory performed significantly better on the nonfocal task than did their counterparts with low working memory. Thus, controlled attention was only necessary for detecting event-based prospective memory cues in the nonfocal task. These results have implications for theories of prospective memory, the processes necessary for cue detection, and the successful fulfillment of intentions.


Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory and Cognition | 2011

An Observation on the Spontaneous Noticing of Prospective Memory Event-Based Cues

Justin B. Knight; J. Thadeus Meeks; Richard L. Marsh; Gabriel I. Cook; Gene A. Brewer; Jason L. Hicks

In event-based prospective memory, current theories make differing predictions as to whether intention-related material can be spontaneously noticed (i.e., noticed without relying on preparatory attentional processes). In 2 experiments, participants formed an intention that was contextually associated to the final phase of the experiment, and lures that overlapped to differing degrees with the features of the intention-related cues were embedded in the initial phase. When participants were outside of the appropriate responding context (i.e., the initial phase), they exhibited slower latencies to lures that exactly matched the features of their intention compared with other types of lures and control words. In addition, on a final remember/know recognition test, participants reported having greater subjective recollection for the occurrence of the exact-match lures. These results suggest that exact-match lures were spontaneously noticed and differentially processed in the absence of any observable preparatory attentional processes. The findings have implications for the theoretical debate over whether preparatory attention must always be relied upon to notice intention-related material.


Frontiers in Human Neuroscience | 2010

Neural correlates of attentional and mnemonic processing in event-based prospective memory.

Justin B. Knight; Lauren E. Ethridge; Richard L. Marsh; Brett A. Clementz

Prospective memory (PM), or memory for realizing delayed intentions, was examined with an event-based paradigm while simultaneously measuring neural activity with high-density EEG recordings. Specifically, the neural substrates of monitoring for an event-based cue were examined, as well as those perhaps associated with the cognitive processes supporting detection of cues and fulfillment of intentions. Participants engaged in a baseline lexical decision task (LDT), followed by a LDT with an embedded PM component. Event-based cues were constituted by color and lexicality (red words). Behavioral data provided evidence that monitoring, or preparatory attentional processes, were used to detect cues. Analysis of the event-related potentials (ERP) revealed visual attentional modulations at 140 and 220 ms post-stimulus associated with preparatory attentional processes. In addition, ERP components at 220, 350, and 400 ms post-stimulus were enhanced for intention-related items. Our results suggest preparatory attention may operate by selectively modulating processing of features related to a previously formed event-based intention, as well as provide further evidence for the proposal that dissociable component processes support the fulfillment of delayed intentions.


Consciousness and Cognition | 2011

On the role of imagery in event-based prospective memory

Gene A. Brewer; Justin B. Knight; J. Thadeus Meeks; Richard L. Marsh

The role of imagery in encoding event-based prospective memories has yet to be fully clarified. Herein, it is argued that imagery augments a cue-to-context association that supports event-based prospective memory performance. By this account, imagery encoding not only improves prospective memory performance but also reduces interference to intention-related information that occurs outside of context. In the current study, when lure words occurred outside of the appropriate responding context, the use of imagery encoding strategies resulted in less interference when compared with a standard event-based intention condition. This difference was eliminated when participants were not given a specific context to associate their intention (i.e., lures occurred within the appropriate responding context). These results support a cue-to-context association account of how imagery operates in certain event-based prospective memory tasks.


Cognitive, Affective, & Behavioral Neuroscience | 2014

Emotional scenes elicit more pronounced self-reported emotional experience and greater EPN and LPP modulation when compared to emotional faces

Nathaniel Thom; Justin B. Knight; Rod K. Dishman; Dean Sabatinelli; Douglas C. Johnson; Brett A. Clementz

Emotional faces and scenes carry a wealth of overlapping and distinct perceptual information. Despite widespread use in the investigation of emotional perception, expressive face and evocative scene stimuli are rarely assessed in the same experiment. Here, we evaluated self-reports of arousal and pleasantness, as well as early and late event-related potentials (e.g., N170, early posterior negativity [EPN], late positive potential [LPP]) as subjects viewed neutral and emotional faces and scenes, including contents representing anger, fear, and joy. Results demonstrate that emotional scenes were rated as more evocative than emotional faces, as only scenes produced elevated self-reports of arousal. In addition, viewing scenes resulted in more extreme ratings of pleasantness (and unpleasantness) than did faces. EEG results indicate that both expressive faces and emotional scenes evoke enhanced negativity in the N170 component, while the EPN and LPP components show significantly enhanced modulation only by scene, relative to face stimuli. These data suggest that viewing emotional scenes results in a more pronounced emotional experience that is associated with reliable modulation of visual event-related potentials that are implicated in emotional circuits in the brain.


Psychonomic Bulletin & Review | 2012

The effects of prior knowledge on the encoding of episodic contextual details

Michael R. DeWitt; Justin B. Knight; Jason L. Hicks; B. Hunter Ball

A positive relationship between prior knowledge and item memory is a consistent finding in the literature. In the present study, we sought to determine whether this relationship extends to episodic details that are present at the time of encoding, namely source memory. Using a novel experimental design, we were able to show both between- and within-subjects effects of prior knowledge on source memory. Specifically, the results revealed that the degree of prior knowledge positively predicted memory for source specifying contextual details. In addition, by including two conditions in which attention was divided either at encoding or retrieval, we were able to show that prior knowledge influences memory by affecting encoding processes. Overall, the data suggest that a priori knowledge within a specific domain allows attentional resources to be allocated toward the encoding of contextual details.


Acta Psychologica | 2011

Divided attention interferes with fulfilling activity-based intentions

Gene A. Brewer; B. Hunter Ball; Justin B. Knight; Michael R. DeWitt; Richard L. Marsh

Two experiments were conducted to examine the effects of divided attention on activity-based prospective memory. After establishing a goal to fulfill an intention upon completion of an ongoing activity, successful completion of the intention generally suffered when attention was being devoted to an additional task (Experiment 1). Forming an implementation intention at encoding ameliorated the negative effects of divided attention (Experiment 2). The results from the present experiments demonstrate that activity-based prospective memory is susceptible to distraction and that implementing encoding strategies that enhance prospective memory performance can reduce this interference. The current work raises interesting questions about the similarities and differences between event- and activity-based prospective memories.


Journal of cognitive psychology | 2012

Encountering items previously paired with prospective memory target events can serve to reactivate intentions

Michael R. DeWitt; Jason L. Hicks; B. Hunter Ball; Justin B. Knight

Two experiments were conducted to determine whether encountering items that were previously paired with prospective memory (PM) targets would serve as effective reminders and thereby improve PM performance. Experiment 1 showed that PM target detection was facilitated by encountering items (cues) that were paired with PM targets prior to intention formation, and that such facilitation was not dependent upon cues and PM targets being semantically related. Using a categorical intention, Experiment 2 showed that encountering cue items improved PM performance for all intention-related items, not just those previously paired with potential PM targets. However, the benefit of encountering cue items was moderated by the number of intervening trials between cues and targets. Overall, the data suggest that encountering items previously paired with target items induces reactivation of the intention but is only beneficial when the heightened level of activation can be maintained by working memory.


Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory and Cognition | 2014

Encoding and retrieval processes involved in the access of source information in the absence of item memory.

B. Hunter Ball; Michael R. DeWitt; Justin B. Knight; Jason L. Hicks

The current study sought to examine the relative contributions of encoding and retrieval processes in accessing contextual information in the absence of item memory using an extralist cuing procedure in which the retrieval cues used to query memory for contextual information were related to the target item but never actually studied. In Experiments 1 and 2, participants studied 1 category member (e.g., onion) from a variety of different categories and at test were presented with an unstudied category label (e.g., vegetable) to probe memory for item and source information. In Experiments 3 and 4, 1 member of unidirectional (e.g., credit or card) or bidirectional (e.g., salt or pepper) associates was studied, whereas the other unstudied member served as a test probe. When recall failed, source information was accessible only when items were processed deeply during encoding (Experiments 1 and 2) and when there was strong forward associative strength between the retrieval cue and target (Experiments 3 and 4). These findings suggest that a retrieval probe diagnostic of semantically related item information reinstantiates information bound in memory during encoding that results in reactivation of associated contextual information, contingent upon sufficient learning of the item itself and the association between the item and its context information.


Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology | 2015

The influence of mood on the process and content of encoding future intentions.

Justin B. Knight; Gene A. Brewer; B. Hunter Ball; Michael R. DeWitt; Richard L. Marsh

Remembering to perform an intention in the future when some environmental cue is encountered is referred to as event-based prospective memory. The influence of mood on this future-oriented memory is unclear. By experimentally manipulating mood, the current set of experiments sought to examine the influence that differing mood states have on encoding future intentions. Participants were induced into a neutral, positive, or negative mood state at intention formation and returned to their baseline mood before beginning the prospective memory task. Relative to the neutral mood, positive mood facilitated and negative mood impaired intention encoding when neutrally toned cues were used, as evidenced by the proportion of cues subsequently detected. The use of negatively toned cues ameliorated the benefit of the positive mood but not the impairment of the negative mood. Further, reinstatement of the encoding mood during retrieval equated performance for all three mood conditions. Results suggest that encoded mood influences the future accessibility and completion of intended behaviours, perhaps through modulation of associative processing. The current study demonstrates that mood plays a determining role in encoding future intentions.

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Gene A. Brewer

Arizona State University

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B. Hunter Ball

Arizona State University

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Jason L. Hicks

Louisiana State University

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J. Thadeus Meeks

Southern Illinois University Edwardsville

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Gabriel I. Cook

Claremont McKenna College

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Lauren E. Ethridge

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Carol A. Tamminga

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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