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Chapter 8 Remembering the Personal Past c. 2008 Pearson Allyn & Bacon Everyday Memory Overview  There has been a recent emphasis on the study of memory in everyday contexts  An increase in ecological validity  Critics worry about sufficient controls; attempt to focus on simpler questions c. 2008 Pearson Allyn & Bacon Autobiographical Memory Overview  Autobiographical Memory:  Memory for a specific life experience  Autobiographical Fact  General (context-free) knowledge about oneself and one’s personal history c. 2008 Pearson Allyn & Bacon Autobiographical Memory Methods of Investigation  Targeted Event Recall  Subjects recall particular events or life periods  Diary Technique  Subjects keep track of daily events;  Allows for assessment of memory accuracy  Cue-Word Technique  Memories generated in response to word cues  Allows for assessment of autobiographical retention function c. 2008 Pearson Allyn & Bacon Autobiographical Memory Autobiographical Retention Function  Lifespan recall of autobiographical memories reveals a consistent pattern  Features:  Forgetting curve   Reminiscence Bump Childhood Amnesia c. 2008 Pearson Allyn & Bacon Autobiographical Retention Function Childhood Amnesia  Childhood amnesia refers to a relative paucity of memories from early childhood  Virtually no memories from prior to age 3 or 4  Usher and Neisser (1993) had subjects recall events that could be corroborated  Varying patterns as a function of event c. 2008 Pearson Allyn & Bacon Autobiographical Retention Function Childhood Amnesia  Possible reasons for childhood amnesia:  Brain development   Declarative memory (basis for episodic memory) slow to develop, relative to procedural Doesn’t account for finding that episodic memories can be formed well before age 3-4 c. 2008 Pearson Allyn & Bacon Autobiographical Retention Function Childhood Amnesia  Possible reasons for childhood amnesia:  Development of Language   Remembering personal past depends on ability to converse with others about it Development of Self  Remembering personal past depends on the knowledge that one has unique set of experiences c. 2008 Pearson Allyn & Bacon Autobiographical Retention Function Childhood Amnesia  Social-Cognitive Development  Nelson & Fivush emphasize the gradual emergence of autobiographical memory  Emergence depends upon memory talk, a developing sense of time and “theory of mind”  Emergence of autobiographical memory will vary across individuals and cultures as a function of these variables. c. 2008 Pearson Allyn & Bacon Autobiographical Retention Function Reminiscence Bump  Autobiographical retention function features disproportionate recall from ages 15-35.  A “reminiscence bump”  Accounts of the reminiscence bump:    Important and distinctive events, often-rehearsed Peak brain functioning occurs in early adulthood Identity formation occurs c. 2008 Pearson Allyn & Bacon Autobiographical Retention Function Forgetting  Retention function reveals a standard forgetting function for recent events  Forgetting due to event similarity and interference  Lack of distinctiveness c. 2008 Pearson Allyn & Bacon Autobiographical Memory Retrieval Factors  Encoding specificity in autobiographical memory  Cues for personal memories will be more effective to the degree that they provide overlap with encoding circumstances  Marian and Neisser (2000) investigated autobiographical memory in Russian-English bilinguals c. 2008 Pearson Allyn & Bacon Autobiographical Memory Retrieval Factors  Gave subjects cue words in one of their 2 languages   Memory retrieved tended to match language of cue In a second study, varied both interview language and cue word language  Interview language was the more powerful cue c. 2008 Pearson Allyn & Bacon Autobiographical Memory Retrieval Factors  Wagenaar (1986) and Brewer (1986) investigated “W” cues for autobiographical memory  “What” – activity cues; most effective  “Where” – location cues  “When” – time cues  “Who” – people cues  Odors tend to be effective cues for personal memories  Proust phenomenon: the apparent power of odors to elicit memories that are especially old and vivid c. 2008 Pearson Allyn & Bacon Autobiographical Memory Self-Memory System  Conway and colleagues propose a self-memory system  Autobiographical memories as constructed from personal knowledge base with three levels  Lifetime Periods  General Events  Event-Specific Knowledge  Particular construction depends on plans and goals c. 2008 Pearson Allyn & Bacon Autobiographical Memory Involuntary Memories  Many autobiographical memories occur spontaneously, in the absence of an explicit cue  Relative to voluntary memories, involuntary memories are more likely to be:     For specific rather than general events For positive events rather than negative events (a Pollyanna Effect) For recent events Associated with a vivid “re-living” c. 2008 Pearson Allyn & Bacon Autobiographical Memory Emotion and Autobiographical Memory  Flashbulb Memory  a detailed, vivid, and confidently held memory for the circumstances surrounding when you heard some startling bit of news  They typically contain five components      Location Activity Source Emotion Aftermath c. 2008 Pearson Allyn & Bacon Emotion and Autobiographical Memory Flashbulb Memory  What produces a flashbulb memory?  Special physiological mechanism? Not likely: flashbulb errors can include (serious) inaccuracies  Neisser and Harsch studied flashbulb memories for the 1986 Challenger disaster   “Phantom flashbulbs” Distortions revealed TV priority and time-slice errors. c. 2008 Pearson Allyn & Bacon Emotion and Autobiographical Memory Flashbulb Memory  Vividness of flashbulb memories is most likely due to:  Distinctiveness  Rehearsal  Personal Salience  Emotion  Memories for September 11 attacks  Pezdek (2004) investigated flashbulb memory in subjects differing in proximity to the attacks c. 2008 Pearson Allyn & Bacon Emotion and Autobiographical Memory Flashbulb Memory  Pezdek (2004) compared New Yorkers and nonNew Yorkers on two types of memory    Event memory – Aspects of the actual event Autobiographical memory – How a person learned about the event Found that stress enhanced memory for aspects of event being closely monitored   New Yorkers: The event itself Non-New Yorkers: How they heard about the event c. 2008 Pearson Allyn & Bacon Emotion and Autobiographical Memory Mood and Autobiographical Memory  Mood-Dependent Memory  Retrieval of a previously encoded event is enhanced when the mood experienced at retrieval matches the mood present at encoding  Depressed individuals are more likely to retrieve negative memories   Tendency is to recall overly general memories Obstructs problem solving? c. 2008 Pearson Allyn & Bacon Autobiographical Memory Functions of Autobiographical Memory  Autobiographical remembering serves a number of important functions:    Communicative  Offer a greater sense of intimacy and connection Emotional  Helps us think through life problems Directive  Can serve to guide future life course c. 2008 Pearson Allyn & Bacon