journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38166488/the-frequency-and-cueing-mechanisms-of-involuntary-autobiographical-memories-while-driving
#41
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Andrew Laughland, Lia Kvavilashvili
Involuntary autobiographical memories (IAMs) have been typically studied with paper diaries, kept for a week or longer. However, such studies are unable to capture the true frequency of IAMs, nor the level of detail that would give new insights into the mechanisms of IAMs. To address this gap, a new audio-recording method was developed and tested on the first author who recorded 674 IAMs while driving a car on a 30-40-minute-long habitual route on 20 occasions. Results revealed very high frequency of IAMs (almost 34 per journey) that were reported more often in response to dynamic (one-off) than static cues...
January 3, 2024: Memory
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38166650/face-masks-degrade-our-ability-to-remember-face-name-associations-more-than-predicted-by-judgments-of-learning
#42
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alexandra M Rodriguez, Sara B Festini
In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, face masks became required attire. Face masks obstruct the bottom portion of faces, restricting face processing. The present study examined the influence face masks have on memory predictions and memory performance for new face-name associations. Participants studied face-name pairs presented for 8 s (Experiment 1) or 10 s (Experiment 2). Half of the face-name pairs included a face mask obstructing the nose and mouth of the pictured face, counterbalanced across participants...
January 2, 2024: Memory
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38146968/witnesses-susceptibility-to-misleading-post-event-information-delivered-in-a-social-media-style-video
#43
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stefanie J Sharman, Meaghan C Danby, Atticus D Gray
In many criminal cases, outcomes rely on eyewitness evidence. Exposure to misleading information after an event reduces the accuracy of witnesses' memories. In some circumstances, warnings about misinformation can protect witnesses. As social media is a growing source of misleading information, this study examined the effect of misleading post-event information delivered via a social media-style video, as well as the utility of a minimal versus detailed warning. Participants ( N  = 145) watched a video showing an electrician stealing items from a client's home...
December 26, 2023: Memory
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38109129/retrieval-fluency-inflates-perceived-preparation-for-difficult-problems
#44
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nadia M Brashier, Catherine H Ho, T'Ajmal K Hogue, Daniel L Schacter
When faced with a difficult problem, people often rely on past experiences. While remembering clearly helps us reach solutions, can retrieval also lead to misperceptions of our abilities? In three experiments, participants encountered "worst case scenarios" they likely had never experienced and that would be difficult to navigate without extensive training (e.g., bitten by snake ). Learning brief tips improved problem-solving performance later, but retrieval increased feelings of preparation by an even larger margin...
December 18, 2023: Memory
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38109122/direct-retrieval-as-a-theory-of-involuntary-autobiographical-memories-evaluation-and-future-directions
#45
REVIEW
Dorthe Berntsen
I evaluate the conception of direct retrieval as originally formulated in the Self-Memory System model (Conway & Pleydell-Pearce [2000]. The construction of autobiographical memories in the self-memory system. Psychological Review , 107 (2), 261-288. https://doi.org/10.1037/0033-295X.107.2.261). In the hierarchical memory organisation proposed in the Self-Memory System model, direct retrieval is described as a bottom-up associative process. While its theoretical role within this model is clear, systematic empirical examination of direct retrieval, viewed as a natural and observable phenomenon, has been hampered by inconsistent operationalisations...
December 18, 2023: Memory
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38011319/alleged-false-accusations-of-abuse-characteristics-consequences-and-coping
#46
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sanne T L Houben, Linsey Raymaekers, Leonie Loop, Desiree Vandervelt, Lawrence Patihis, Melanie Sauerland
ABSTRACT We have very little knowledge about the characteristics and consequences of false abuse accusations. Sixty-one members of a German support organisation for allegedly falsely accused individuals provided information about themselves, the accuser, the accusation, the consequences of the allegation, and their coping strategies. The majority of respondents were male (90%), accused of sexual abuse (89%), and a parent of the accuser (71%). The initial allegations were frequently (72%) associated with the accuser undergoing psychotherapy...
November 27, 2023: Memory
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37976035/judgments-of-learning-reflect-the-encoding-of-contexts-not-items-evidence-from-a-test-of-recognition-exclusion
#47
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Belgin Ünal, Aaron S Benjamin
Two sources of evidence seem to be shared by judgments of past recognition and judgments of future performance: item memory or familiarity (i.e., memory for the item independent of the context in which it was experienced) and context memory or recollection (i.e., memory for the context specific to a particular prior encounter). However, there are few studies investigating the link between these two putative memory processes and judgments of learning (JOLs). We tested memory and metamemory using a continuous exclusion procedure - a modified recognition memory task where study events for two classes of items are interleaved with test trials in which the subject must endorse items from one class and reject items from the other...
November 17, 2023: Memory
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37962548/self-and-other-focused-autobiographical-memories-of-life-story-events-across-cultures
#48
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alejandra Zaragoza Scherman, Sinué Salgado, Zhifang Shao, Dorthe Berntsen
Autobiographical memory and personal life stories are typically conceived as memories about the self. However, personal life stories often contain information about important events from other people's lives. Sometimes those memories become an important part of our own life stories, illuminating the role that other people play in remembering our personal past. In this study, we examined the extent to which memories of important life story events are self-focused (e.g., I moved to Japan) or other-focused (e...
November 14, 2023: Memory
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37948575/on-the-retrieval-of-earliest-memories
#49
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Berivan Ece, Nilüfer Göktaş
Earliest memories were examined with respect to recollection type (i.e., remember-know), retrieval type (i.e., direct-generative), retrieval speed, and memory fluency (i.e., phonemic, semantic, and autobiographical). A total of 137 young adults (94 females; Mage  = 20.47, SDage  = 1.57) reported their earliest memories and specified their recollection and retrieval types for reported memories. They further dated their recollections by reporting the age at event, rated event characteristics and completed the phonemic, semantic, and autobiographical memory fluency tasks...
November 10, 2023: Memory
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37930782/grandiose-narcissism-influences-the-phenomenology-of-remembered-past-and-imagined-future-events
#50
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ellen F Finch, Sarah E Kalinowski, Jill M Hooley, Daniel L Schacter
Little empirical work has examined future thinking in narcissistic grandiosity. We here extend prior work finding that people scoring high in grandiosity have self-bolstering tendencies in remembering past events, and we consider whether these tendencies extend to imagining future events. Across an initial study ( N  = 112) and replication ( N  = 169), participants wrote about remembered past events and imagined future events in which they embodied or would embody either positive or negative traits...
November 6, 2023: Memory
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37930779/younger-and-older-adults-memory-of-past-feelings-surrounding-an-election
#51
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sagarika Devarayapuram Ramakrishnan, Hiba Kausar, Sarah J Barber
People often misremember their past feelings, especially when recalling their prior mood as opposed to their specific emotions in response to events. A previous study also found that the direction of memory errors varies based on feeling type; younger adults overestimated the intensity of prior moods but underestimated the intensity of prior event-specific emotions. This study aimed to replicate these patterns and test whether they vary with age. In doing so, we also tested whether an age-related positivity effect would emerge, such that older adults would be relatively more likely to overestimate past positive feelings and underestimate past negative feelings...
November 6, 2023: Memory
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37922396/early-childhood-memories-of-individuals-convicted-of-sexual-offences
#52
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Natalie Martschuk, Danielle Arlanda Harris, Martine B Powell, Jane Goodman-Delahunty
This study used innovative transdisciplinary methods to describe the nature and extent of early childhood memories recalled by 84 adults convicted of sexual offences. The timing of the memories, level of detail recalled and way memories were recollected were largely consistent with extant memory research. One important finding, however, was that more than 30% of our participants recalled particularly traumatic and distressing childhood experiences - a much higher proportion than previously observed in nonoffending samples...
November 3, 2023: Memory
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37922385/priming-in-the-autobiographical-memory-system-implications-and-future-directions
#53
REVIEW
John H Mace
Studies examining priming in autobiographical memory are fewer in number (some two dozen) compared to other areas (e.g., semantic memory priming), which have seen hundreds of studies. Nevertheless, autobiographical memory priming studies have utilised quite a number of different experimental paradigms, with many having interesting ecological implications. This paper reviews the bulk of these studies. It discusses the various theoretical implications of these studies, past and present. It suggests numerous future directions in this area, as the study of priming in autobiographical memory has had significant implications, despite the small number of studies, and it offers enormous future potential...
November 3, 2023: Memory
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37922384/specific-autobiographical-memories-are-a-resource-for-identity-strength-among-mature-but-not-emerging-adults
#54
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Denise R Beike, Holly E Cole, Carmen R Merrick
Four studies, three pre-planned on Open Science Framework, with 2296 participants explored the potential role of recollecting autobiographical memories in enhancing the sense of identity. Among emerging adults (college students under age 25), recollecting important autobiographical memories did not strengthen sense of identity. Autobiographical memories failed to strengthen identity among emerging adults despite inducing low self-clarity first; despite attempts to prime self-consistent memories by having emerging adults report their stable self-aspects first; and despite attempts to inspire self-event connections by asking emerging adults to explain how the memories exemplified something enduring about the self...
November 3, 2023: Memory
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37910587/exploring-techniques-for-encoding-spoken-instructions-in-working-memory-a-comparison-of-verbal-rehearsal-motor-imagery-self-enactment-and-action-observation
#55
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tian-Xiao Yang, Richard J Allen, Amanda H Waterman, Agnieszka J Graham, Xiao-Min Su, Yan Gao
Encoding and recalling spoken instructions is subject to working memory capacity limits. Previous research suggests action-based encoding facilitates instruction recall, but has not directly compared benefits across different types of action-based techniques. The current study addressed this in two experiments with young adults. In Experiment 1, participants listened to instructional sequences containing four action-object pairs, and encoded these instructions using either a motor imagery or verbal rehearsal technique, followed by recall via oral repetition or enactment...
November 1, 2023: Memory
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37878775/memory-error-speed-predicts-subsequent-accuracy-for-recognition-misses-but-not-false-alarms
#56
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Melisa Akan, Elif Yüvrük, Jeffrey J Starns
The current study aims to test whether faster recognition memory errors tend to result from stronger misleading retrieval, making them harder to correct in subsequent decisions than slower errors, and whether this pattern holds for both miss and false-alarm errors. We used a paradigm in which each single-item Old/New recognition decision was followed by a two-alternative forced-choice (2AFC) test between a target and a lure. Each 2AFC trial had one item that had just been tested for an Old/New judgment and one item that had not been previously tested...
October 25, 2023: Memory
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37870905/factors-that-contribute-to-an-inability-to-remember-an-important-aspect-of-a-traumatic-event
#57
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sandra J E Langeslag, Zachary W Posey
Dissociative amnesia is controversial. We tested other factors that could contribute to an inability to remember an important aspect of a traumatic event: how traumatic the event was, organic amnesia, dissociative state, childhood amnesia, expression suppression, sleep disturbance, repeated experiences, and ordinary forgetting. Trauma survivors who reported an inability to remember an important aspect of a traumatic event rated the event as traumatic as trauma survivors who reported no such inability to remember...
October 23, 2023: Memory
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37862434/collective-interactions-collaborative-inhibition-and-shared-spatial-knowledge
#58
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Teriitutea Quesnot, Bernard Guelton
Research on spatial mental representations focuses on individual mental maps and spatial knowledge. This exploratory study investigates instead collective interactions, collaborative memory, and the sharing of spatial knowledge. Based on the principle of collaborative inhibition (i.e., people recall information less effectively in groups), we posed the following research question: How do collective interactions, occurring during environmental exploration and group drawing sessions, affect collaborative inhibition, and the quality of sketch maps designed collectively ? We conducted in situ explorations in Plaine St-Denis (France) with real-time tracking, followed by individual and group drawing sessions...
October 20, 2023: Memory
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37856684/retrieval-practice-reduces-relative-forgetting-over-time
#59
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anna T Nickl, Karl-Heinz T Bäuml
There is overwhelming evidence in the literature that retrieval practice of studied material can lead to better final recall than restudy of the same material. Far less clear is whether this recall benefit is accompanied by reduced subsequent forgetting over time. This study revisited the issue in two experiments by comparing the effects of retrieval practice - with and without feedback -, restudy, and a no-practice condition on recall across different delay intervals ranging between three minutes and several days...
October 19, 2023: Memory
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37850875/listeners-effects-on-autobiographical-memory-for-recent-events
#60
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Azriel Grysman, Melanie Baime, Ethan Cantor
The current study tested the effects of attentive versus distracted listening on both speakers and listeners in recall of an autobiographical memory. Participants included 128 pairs of friends who spoke with each other over a video call about recent negative experience that one of them had. Participants were randomly assigned to be speakers or listeners, and listeners were randomly assigned to an attentive and a distracted condition. Memory narratives were coded for factual and interpretive content. Participants returned approximately 4 weeks later, when both speaker and listener separately reported their memories of the prior conversation...
October 18, 2023: Memory
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