Title: Autobiographical memory
1Lecture 717-12-2007
2Plan
- Characteristics
- Levels
- Autobiographical memory as life narrative
- Infantile amnesia
- Reminiscence bump
- Flashbulb memories
3What autobiographical memory is?
- It stores events and facts directly connected to
the self - It directs our behavior with the aid of knowledge
about our own past - But this concept does not describe neither any
specific store, nor any specific mechanism - First it was presented in philosophy Bergson
proposed a memory for personal events and habits
4History
- First studies conducted by Galton and Freud
- Galton interested in the taxonomy of memories
and the causes of the diversity of memories
studies conducted with verbal cues - Freud interested by the causal relations between
the past and the present retrieving life history
as an element of psychotherapy
5Functions of autobiographical memory
- Intrapersonal construction and storage of self-
related data and own history mood regulation and
maintenance of emotional balance - Interpersonal engaging in relations with others
and sustaining relations with other people
autopresentation - Generation of present and future behaviors on the
basis of personal experience
6Methods of study
- The breakfast questionnaire and other verbal
methods using verbal associations - Researchers as own subjects M. Linton, R.T.
White, W.A. Wagenaar describing everyday events
from ones own life together with cues - Interviews
- Experiments, for example implanting false memories
7Characteristics episodic or semantic?
- Autobiographical memory is a permanent, long-term
memory, a part of declarative memory - Identified by some researchers with episodic
memory, others hold the opinion that it goes
beyond - because it is more constructive and integrative
and includes a generalized knowledge about ones
past, behaviors, emotions, attitudes - The recording of personal experiences and their
meaning - Generic information about oneself
8Retrieval general remarks
- Usually retrieval starts with more general
information followed by specific one - Very often an inferential process
- Longer time needed to retrieve autobiographical
memories, as compared with episodic and semantic - Some information is always easily accessed, like
generic one
9M. Lintons hierarchical model of
autobiographical memory
- The highest level of storage mood
- Themes and sub-themes of memories
- Elaborations of themes and sub-themes
- Events, episodes, and amalgamates
- Elements of events and episodes
- Details
10Levels of autobiographical memory
- Conway three levels
- The event level, which refers to specific,
individual events - General events level, which refers to extended
sequences or repeated series of events, often
sharing a common component - Lifetime periods, broad, theme-based portions of
a persons life
11Hierarchy of autobiographical memories
12Events-specific memories
- The most basic level
- Corresponds to episodic memories
- Memories for specific, continuous periods of time
- Contain many perceptual and contextual details
- Most event-specific memories are lost over time
- Some become singular, unique, when they concern
originating events, turning points, anchoring
events or are important as guide of behavior in
the future
13General-event memories
- A sequence of specific events that form a larger
episode, egg, first day in a new school - Repeating events
- Requires integration and interpretation
14Lifetime period memories
- The highest level of the hierarchy
- Long periods organized along a common theme, like
childhood, primary school, high school, studies,
professional career... - Often memories are retrieved in the frames of
lifetime periods and confined to a specific theme
15The recursive process of breaking down an
autobiographical memory into smaller parts
16Temporal overlapping of various lifetime periods
with different themes
17Autobiographical memory as life narrative
- A general human tendency to organize experiences
into a narrative structure - People are able to access autobiographical
memories on the basis of such components as
people, places, activities, or perceptual cues
(pictures, sounds, odors, tastes...) - The retrieval of one memory often triggers
related memories by causal relations or
similarity - Usually recall of events proceeds in a forward
order (re-living) than in a backward one
18Perspectives in autobiographical memory
- Field memories experiencing a memory from the
original perspective - Observer memories viewing the situation from
outside - Older memories are more likely to be observers
memories - More emotional memories are more likely to be
field memories - The more self-aware is a person, the more likely
is an observer memory
19Infantile amnesia
- Autobiographical memory has a classical
forgetting curve with two exceptions infantile
amnesia and the reminiscence bump - The limits of infantile amnesia and factors
influencing then - Gender
- Intelligence
- Verbal abilities
- Cultural factors
- Position of the child in the family
20Infantile amnesia remembering the birth of a
sibling
21Infantile amnesia theoretical explanations
- The neuropsychological hypothesis amnesia is
the result of the brain immaturity, early
experiences are not registered (hippocampus and
frontal lobe late development) or they traces are
not permanent - The psychodynamic hypothesis early memories are
repressed - The cognitive view ways of coding and
retrieving vary personal memories may appear
only once the self concept has emerged
22Reminiscence bump
23Reminiscence bump
24Reminiscence bump - explanations
- Cognitive account
- primacy effect (many first times)
- transition points
- more positive events
- Neurological account the time of the best
cognitive functioning - Identity formation view
25Retrieval of memories differing in emotional value
- More positive as compared with negative or
neutral memories are retrieved - With time the emotional strengths of memories
fades especially true for negative events - The past is improved in autobiographical memory
- Exception people with depression
26Intensity of the affect linked with memories
27Flashbulb memories
- Highly detailed memories for surprising events
- First description in 1899 by Colgrove memory of
the circumstances of learning about Lincolns
death - Brown and Kulik (1977) memory of the
circumstances of learning about John F. Kennedys
assassination - Canonic categories information about the place
accompanying events source of information
consequences of the event felt emotions
28Flashbulb memories cont.
- Are they really accurate?
- Neissers and Harsch (1992) study on memories
concerning learning about the explosion of the
space shuttle Challenger, after 24 hours, 2 years
and a half and after 3 years in the last test 7
retrieval accuracy, 25 absolutely false - But in general people are persuaded that their
memories are very accurate, vivid and authentic
29Major factors in the creation of flashbulb
memories
30Flashbulb memories from different periods of life