Cueing others’ memories

被引:0
|
作者
Jonathan G. Tullis
Aaron S. Benjamin
机构
[1] Indiana University,Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences
[2] University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,Department of Psychology
来源
Memory & Cognition | 2015年 / 43卷
关键词
Metamemory; Cue generation; Perspective taking; Metacognition;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Many situations require us to generate external cues to support later retrieval from memory. For instance, we create file names in order to cue our memory to a file’s contents, and instructors create lecture slides to remember what points to make during classes. We even generate cues for others when we remind friends of shared experiences or send colleagues a computer file that is named in such a way so as to remind them of its contents. Here we explore how and how well learners tailor retrieval cues for different intended recipients. Across three experiments, subjects generated verbal cues for a list of target words for themselves or for others. Learners generated cues for others by increasing the normative cue-to-target associative strength but also by increasing the number of other words their cues point to, relative to cues that they generated for themselves. This strategy was effective: such cues supported higher levels of recall for others than cues generated for oneself. Generating cues for others also required more time than generating cues for oneself. Learners responded to the differential demands of cue generation for others by effortfully excluding personal, episodic knowledge and including knowledge that they estimate to be broadly shared.
引用
收藏
页码:634 / 646
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Cueing others' memories
    Tullis, Jonathan G.
    Benjamin, Aaron S.
    MEMORY & COGNITION, 2015, 43 (04) : 634 - 646
  • [2] On the Authentic Memories of Others
    不详
    MINNESOTA REVIEW, 2023, (100) : 6 - 14
  • [3] Judging the reality of others' memories
    Clark-Foos, Arlo
    Brewer, Gene
    Marsh, Richard L.
    MEMORY, 2015, 23 (03) : 427 - 436
  • [4] Looking ahead: Anticipatory cueing of attention to objects others will look at
    Joyce, Katherine
    Schenke, Kimberley
    Bayliss, Andrew
    Bach, Patric
    COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 2016, 7 (1-4) : 74 - 81
  • [5] The frequency and cueing mechanisms of involuntary autobiographical memories while driving
    Laughland, Andrew
    Kvavilashvili, Lia
    MEMORY, 2024, 32 (06) : 723 - 737
  • [6] Event cueing, event clusters, and the temporal distribution of autobiographical memories
    Brown, NR
    Schopflocher, D
    APPLIED COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY, 1998, 12 (04) : 305 - 319
  • [7] The memories of others: How leaders import collective memories in political speech
    Adams, Tracy
    Baden, Christian
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE SOCIOLOGY, 2020, 61 (05) : 310 - 330
  • [8] BEWARE OF THIS PERSON! BRAIN DYNAMICS IN VIEWING OTHERS CUEING THREAT AND SAFETY
    Bublatzky, Florian
    Guerra, Pedro
    Alpers, Georg
    PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 2017, 54 : S26 - S26
  • [9] UNDERAPPRECIATED BENEFITS OF READING OWN AND OTHERS' MEMORIES
    Sekhsaria, Shriya
    Pronin, Emily
    SOCIAL COGNITION, 2021, 39 (04) : 504 - 525
  • [10] New motor memories from observing others
    不详
    NEUROSCIENTIST, 2006, 12 (02): : 100 - 100