Title of article :
Indirect cueing elicits distinct types of autobiographical event representations
Author/Authors :
Scoboria، نويسنده , , Alan and Talarico، نويسنده , , Jennifer M.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages :
15
From page :
1495
To page :
1509
Abstract :
Studies that distinguish among believed memories, believed-not-remembered events (e.g., family stories), and nonbelieved memories (i.e., memories no longer believed to have occurred) typically rely on experimenter provided or overtly elicited events. These methods may mis-estimate the frequency and nature of such events in everyday memory. Three studies examined whether such events would be elicited via indirect cueing. Participants recalled and rated events on autobiographical belief, recollection, and other characteristics associated with remembering. All three event types resulted, but with a low rate of nonbelieved memories. Believed and nonbelieved memories received similar perceptual and re-experiencing ratings, and both exceeded believed-not-remembered events. Lifespan cueing found nonbelieved memories to be most frequent in middle childhood (ages 6–11). Cueing for “events” vs. “memories” revealed that “memory” cues lead to retrieval of a more homogeneous set of events and differences when predicting autobiographical belief and recollection. These studies support the distinction between autobiographical belief and recollection for autobiographical events.
Keywords :
EVENT , cueing , memory , Autobiographical belief , Nonbelieved memory
Journal title :
Consciousness and Cognition
Serial Year :
2013
Journal title :
Consciousness and Cognition
Record number :
2292659
Link To Document :
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