Similarity Is Associated With Where Repeated Event Memories Fall On The Semantic-Episodic Continuum - Info and Reading Options
By Oliver Bontkes, Daniela Palombo and Eva Rubínová
“Similarity Is Associated With Where Repeated Event Memories Fall On The Semantic-Episodic Continuum” Metadata:
- Title: ➤ Similarity Is Associated With Where Repeated Event Memories Fall On The Semantic-Episodic Continuum
- Authors: Oliver BontkesDaniela PalomboEva Rubínová
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Note: This registration is identical to our earlier registration (https://osf.io/ev4zx) barring the fact that we removed PDFs of questionnaires (and any references to them) due to potential copyright concerns. Psychologists are becoming increasingly interested in studying memories for repeated events as a bridge between 'episodic' memory (i.e., memory for specific events localized in time and place) and 'semantic' memory (i.e., memory for general facts and information). However, the relative contribution of episodic and semantic memory in recalls of repeated events has yet to be determined: do repeated events rely more on episodic memory or semantic memory? Moreover, do different repeated events utilize these forms of memory to different degrees? Prior experimental research has shown that children are more accurate in their recall of specific episodes of repeated events when the repeated events are low in similarity. Conversely, when episodes of repeated events are high in similarity, children tend to recall more details about the 'gist' of the event or, in other words, the details that are fixed across episodes (Danby et al., 2019). Do recalls of repeated events in adults follow a similar pattern, such that repeated events lower in similarity utilize more episodic memory and repeated events high in similarity utilize more semantic memory? Here, the “similarity” of an event refers to a continuum from low-similarity (where each episode of a repeated event is very different) to high-similarity (where each episode of a repeated event is very similar). Danby, M. C., Sharman, S. J., Brubacher, S. P., & Powell, M. B. (2019). The effects of episode similarity on children’s reports of a repeated event. Memory, 27(4), 561–567. https://doi.org/10.1080/09658211.2018.1529798.
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- Added Date: 2023-01-28 17:34:32
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