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Incidental self-reference effects in memory Sheila J. Cunningham University of Abertay Dundee, Scotland

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Page 1: Incidental self-reference effects in memory Sheila J. Cunningham University of Abertay Dundee, Scotland

Incidental self-reference effects in memory

Sheila J. CunninghamUniversity of Abertay Dundee, Scotland

Page 2: Incidental self-reference effects in memory Sheila J. Cunningham University of Abertay Dundee, Scotland

What is the self-reference effect?

Information encoded about yourself is more memorable than information about other people = ‘self-reference effect’ (SRE)

Page 3: Incidental self-reference effects in memory Sheila J. Cunningham University of Abertay Dundee, Scotland

Trait evaluation paradigm

‘Are you creative?’

‘Is Brad Pitt modest?’

v.

Self evaluation v. evaluation of other referent:

Traits encoded about self tend to be better remembered.(see Symons & Johnston, 1997)

Page 4: Incidental self-reference effects in memory Sheila J. Cunningham University of Abertay Dundee, Scotland

Paradigm-driven?• Explanation: Self-knowledge > other-knowledge

(e.g., Klein & Loftus, 1986, Symons & Johnson, 1997)

• Paradigm requires application of this knowledge

• Can a self-reference effect be elicited if self-evaluation is not required at encoding?

Page 5: Incidental self-reference effects in memory Sheila J. Cunningham University of Abertay Dundee, Scotland

Exp. 1: Incidental SREs

• Tested 48 female participants (18-25 years).

• Between-subjects design: p’s completed one of two encoding tasks:

– Evaluative self-reference (standard SRE task)

– ‘Incidental’ self-reference (self-cue not task-relevant)

• Followed by surprise recognition memory task.

Page 6: Incidental self-reference effects in memory Sheila J. Cunningham University of Abertay Dundee, Scotland

Evaluative: does this word describe you?Incidental: does this word appear above the face?

Calm

Exp. 1: Encoding task

Friendly

Page 7: Incidental self-reference effects in memory Sheila J. Cunningham University of Abertay Dundee, Scotland

Evaluative: does this word describe Angelina?Incidental: does this word appear above the face?

Modest

Exp. 1: Encoding task

Tidy

Page 8: Incidental self-reference effects in memory Sheila J. Cunningham University of Abertay Dundee, Scotland

Results: trait memory

0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

Evaluation Incidental

Reco

gniti

on a

ccur

acy

SelfOther

Referent F(1,44) = 38.9, p <.001 Task F(1,44) = 101.2, p <.001

(Turk, Cunningham & Macrae, 2008) RxT F(1,44) = 4.1, p <.05

Page 9: Incidental self-reference effects in memory Sheila J. Cunningham University of Abertay Dundee, Scotland

Exp. 1: Discussion

• Clearly shows an incidental SRE• Driven by attention by self-relevant stimuli?

(Turk et al., in press a,b; Van den Bos et al., under review)

Page 10: Incidental self-reference effects in memory Sheila J. Cunningham University of Abertay Dundee, Scotland

SRE development

• Previous work suggests SRE develops in late childhood – in line with abstract constructs.

• Little evidence of early SREs because:– Abstract encoding task?– Evaluation?– Immature self-system?

• Exp. 2: Tested 111 four- to six-year-old children on CONCRETE version of tasks.

Page 11: Incidental self-reference effects in memory Sheila J. Cunningham University of Abertay Dundee, Scotland

Exp. 2: Evaluative task

Page 12: Incidental self-reference effects in memory Sheila J. Cunningham University of Abertay Dundee, Scotland

Exp. 2: Incidental task

Page 13: Incidental self-reference effects in memory Sheila J. Cunningham University of Abertay Dundee, Scotland

Results: trait memory

00.10.20.30.40.50.60.70.80.9

Evaluation Incidental

Reco

gniti

on a

ccur

acy

SelfOther

Referent F(1,109) = 20.50, p <.001 Task F(1,109) = 17.47, p <.001

(Cunningham et al., in prep.) RxT F(1,109) = 0.05, NS

Page 14: Incidental self-reference effects in memory Sheila J. Cunningham University of Abertay Dundee, Scotland

Exp. 2: Discussion

• A self-reference effect can be found in early childhood – Evaluative AND Incidental.

• Evaluation does not provide additional self-referential memory advantage in young children.

Page 15: Incidental self-reference effects in memory Sheila J. Cunningham University of Abertay Dundee, Scotland

• Associating stimuli with the self leads to a memory advantage – no matter how incidental the link.

• The incidental SRE is robust in early childhood.

• Only in our adult sample did evaluation provide an additional self-referential advantage.

• Need to explore the mechanisms that drive the incidental SRE.

Conclusions

Page 16: Incidental self-reference effects in memory Sheila J. Cunningham University of Abertay Dundee, Scotland

Collaborators:

David J. Turk C. Neil Macrae

(University of Aberdeen)

[email protected]