(7) Autobiographical memory Flashcards
What is Autobiographical memory?
- Own personal history
- Made up of episodic, semantic and procedural memory
- Use of imagery, spatial temporal context
- Records of meaning, facts and concepts
- Importance of information to one’s self of sense (critical feature)
What did Galton (1879) find about when he tried to learn words from a piece of paper?
- Participants: N = 1
- Procedure: 75 words on a piece of paper, tried to learn them. Each word was a cue word to trigger certain memories. Repeated these 4 times with the same words.
- Findings: memories from adulthood, same associations, 289 words were different. Retrieving the same things
What did Crovitz and Schiffman, 1974 investigate about diary studies?
- Rediscovery of Galton’s word cuing technique (Crovitz and Schiffman, 1974)
- Participants: 98
- Procedure: 20 cue words
- Frequency of memories decreased as a function of the age of the memory, more memories occur in recent times
- Don’t really know what the participants experience was
What did Linton (1975) find doing a personal 5 year diary study?
- Participants: 1
- Procedure: recorded events in a diary, then later checked her memories against the diary. Did this over a 5 year period. Tested herself every month of order of events and the specific dates
- Results: sometimes tested herself more than once, up to 4 times. Rehearsal plays a big role in remembering. Positive events were remembered more
What did Brown and Kulik (1977) find about flashbulb memories and assassination cases?
- Memories were so vivid of the assassination it became flashbulb memory
- 80 participants, 40 were black Americans, 40 were white
- Given a questionnaire, given events and had to recall what order they remembered the event
- Black participants remembered those who were killed for racial reasons
- Event must be significant or consequential
What are the Canonical categories?
- Place
- Ongoing activity
- Informant
- Own affect
- Other affect
- Aftermath
What did Schmoclk, Buffalo and Squire (2000) find about memories of the OJ Simpson trial?
- Publicised criminal trial
- Participants: 222
- Asked how they felt about the verdict of the OJ Simpson trial
- 2 groups: mailed another questionnaire 15 or 32 months later to test whether flashbulb memories were accurate
- Asked about specific events about when they heard the news, if they are special memories there should be no differences in the time points
- Majority had no distortions regardless of timeframe, however there were some minor and major distortions which goes against the hypothesis
What was Conway (1996)’s Hierarchical model?
- Event specific memories
- General events
- Lifetime periods – personal ways we organised our autobiographical past
- Working self – monitoring function that controls retrieval of information from these different levels of representation (e.g. our goals)
What is Infantile amnesia?
- Inability to recall childhood memories from the first 3-5 years of life
- Lower than expected if you just consider forgetting
- Miles 1893 – published first account
- Freud believed it was due to repression
- Believed that no memories were formed, or some formed but were inaccessible (cognitive or biological changes, disrupts ability to recall)
What did Nelson (1993) find when looking at a case study of infantile amnesia?
- Emily 2 ½ years of age
- Recorded recalling events from 2 months earlier (e.g. car breaking down), shows that memories can be formed
- Some from the previous day, others from up to 6 months ago
What is a Reminiscence bump?
- Asked to recall events between 15-30, more likely to remember
- Events in this time period are pretty salient, big life events
- Life narrative represents an account of our lives as we progress
- Positive and emotionally intense
What is the Life narrative hypothesis, Gluck and Bluck (2007)?
- Participants: 659, 50-90 years old
- Procedure: list 15 life events, date them, rate them with respect to valence, perceived control etc
- reminiscence bump occurs for positive events but not for negative events (some refer to WWII related events)
- Anchoring events
What is Cultural transmission?
- Passing on knowledge, skills abilities to communicate and social norms in a social context than biologically
- Possible that parents passed on song choice
What did Joslyn and Oakes (2005) find about memory tests and memory recall of diary entries?
- Participants: 42
- Procedure: week 1 diary pack, had to record two unique events
- Had to return week 1 diary, told that week 1 would not be tested but week 2 would be, week 3 they were given a memory test to recall memories from week 1 and week 2
- Findings: forget group remembered week 2 more than week 1, similarities between both weeks in remember group
What is PTSD?
- Post-traumatic stress disorder
- Involves flashbacks – vivid memories of the terror
- Memory disorder more than an anxiety disorder