Event self-importance, event rehearsal, and the fading affect bias in autographical memory.
Event self-importance, event rehearsal, and the fading affect bias in autographical memory.
Prior research suggests that the negative affect associated with autobiographical memories fades faster across time than the positive affect associated with such memories (i.e., the fading affect bias, FAB). Data described in the present article reveal several moderators of this bias. The FAB is small when events are perceived to be self-important, psychologically open, or self-caused; it is large when events are perceived to be atypical of a person's life. The data also suggest that the FAB is especially large when events are rehearsed in the course of conveying events to others, or when events are being privately savored or solved; this effect does not emerge for various other forms of private rehearsal. Theoretical implications of these results are discussed.
172-195
Ritchie, T.D.
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Skowronski, J.J.
6957aa57-595a-43f9-ad6b-68366abcbf4e
Wood, S.E.
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Walker, W.R.
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Vogl, R.J.
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Gibbons, J.A.
466ab77f-e184-454c-afe4-6fcc400de27f
1 April 2006
Ritchie, T.D.
63cb6dc6-b79b-4226-b3b8-c6caaa166e7c
Skowronski, J.J.
6957aa57-595a-43f9-ad6b-68366abcbf4e
Wood, S.E.
b7c66999-5826-475d-a4d0-1a589ca10700
Walker, W.R.
14a7e7e1-7476-4485-9a51-b0447f7d61ea
Vogl, R.J.
d287bde8-ea93-4d10-a168-fb4e74995809
Gibbons, J.A.
466ab77f-e184-454c-afe4-6fcc400de27f
Ritchie, T.D., Skowronski, J.J., Wood, S.E., Walker, W.R., Vogl, R.J. and Gibbons, J.A.
(2006)
Event self-importance, event rehearsal, and the fading affect bias in autographical memory.
Self and Identity, 5 (2), .
(doi:10.1080/15298860600591222).
Abstract
Prior research suggests that the negative affect associated with autobiographical memories fades faster across time than the positive affect associated with such memories (i.e., the fading affect bias, FAB). Data described in the present article reveal several moderators of this bias. The FAB is small when events are perceived to be self-important, psychologically open, or self-caused; it is large when events are perceived to be atypical of a person's life. The data also suggest that the FAB is especially large when events are rehearsed in the course of conveying events to others, or when events are being privately savored or solved; this effect does not emerge for various other forms of private rehearsal. Theoretical implications of these results are discussed.
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Published date: 1 April 2006
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Local EPrints ID: 44830
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/44830
ISSN: 1529-8868
PURE UUID: 8afc85a2-2a27-42aa-baf8-7d1f1e5f9151
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Date deposited: 16 Mar 2007
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 09:08
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Author:
T.D. Ritchie
Author:
J.J. Skowronski
Author:
S.E. Wood
Author:
W.R. Walker
Author:
R.J. Vogl
Author:
J.A. Gibbons
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