4.2 Article

Influence of the physical effort of reminder-setting on strategic offloading of delayed intentions

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Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/17470218231199977

Keywords

Memory; effort; metacognition; offloading; reminder

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Intention offloading refers to using external reminders to help remember delayed intentions. Two experiments investigated how the cost of physical effort associated with reminder-setting influences strategic intention offloading under different levels of memory load. Results showed that reminder-setting was reduced when it was more effortful, and participants with less confidence in their memory abilities were more likely to set reminders. The physical costs of reminder-setting had the greatest impact when participants were uncertain about their strategy choice.
Intention offloading involves using external reminders such as diaries, to-do lists, and digital alerts to help us remember delayed intentions. Recent studies have provided evidence for various cognitive and metacognitive factors that guide intention offloading, but little research has investigated the physical cost of reminder-setting itself. Here, we present two pre-registered experiments investigating how the cost of physical effort associated with reminder-setting influences strategic intention offloading under different levels of memory load. At all memory loads, reminder-setting was reduced when it was more effortful. The ability to set reminders allowed participants to compensate for the influence of memory load on accuracy in the low-effort condition; this effect was attenuated in the high-effort condition. In addition, there was evidence that participants with less confidence in their memory abilities were more likely to set reminders. Contrary to prediction, physical effort had the greatest effect on reminder-setting at intermediate memory loads. We speculate that the physical costs of reminder-setting might have the greatest impact when participants are uncertain about their strategy choice. These results demonstrate the importance of physical effort as one of the factors relevant to cost-benefit decision-making about cognitive offloading strategies.

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