Abstract

More than one in every four women in the world experience sexual violence (SV) in their lifetime, most often as teenagers and young adults. These traumatic experiences leave memories in the brain, which are difficult if not impossible to forget. We asked whether women with SV history experience stronger memories of their most stressful life event than women without SV history and if so, whether strength relates to ruminative and trauma-related thoughts. Using the Autobiographical Memory Questionnaire (AMQ), women with SV history (n = 64) reported this memory as especially strong (p < 0.001), remembering more sensory and contextual details, compared to women without SV history (n = 119). They further considered the event a significant part of their personal life story. The strength of the memory was highly correlated with posttraumatic cognitions and ruminative thoughts, as well as symptoms of depression and anxiety (p's < 0.001, n = 183). A third (33%) of the women with SV history were diagnosed with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), but PTSD alone did not account for the increase in memory strength (p's < 0.001). These data suggest that the experience of SV increases the strength of stressful autobiographical memories, which are then reexperienced in everyday life during posttraumatic and ruminative thoughts. We propose that the repeated rehearsal of vivid stressful life memories generates more trauma memories in the brain, making the experience of SV even more difficult to forget.

Highlights

  • Sexual violence (SV) against women is common in today’s world with numbers upward of 25% [1, 2]

  • A related theory, known as the “multiple trace theory” was developed by Nadel and Moscovitch to account for the persistence of memories [29,30,31]. We extend their theory to suggest that the repeated rehearsal of a vivid autobiographical memory during rumination generates more trauma memories, thereby making the trauma more difficult to “forget.” The purpose of the present study was to investigate the relationship between rumination and the strength of autobiographical memories in women with SV history

  • One-third of women with SV history (n = 21) met diagnostic criteria for current posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) according to Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-5 (SCID)-5 criteria

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Summary

Introduction

Sexual violence (SV) against women is common in today’s world with numbers upward of 25% [1, 2]. Most experiences occur during adolescence and young adulthood, when women are most vulnerable [3]. The numbers are high for women in college. The White House Task Force partnered with the Bureau of Justice to survey SV on nine college campuses. Of nearly 15,000 responders, ∼10% reported SV during college [4]. Other surveys suggest numbers closer to 25% [5, 6]. Percentages are even higher (32%) for women in the same age group but not enrolled in college [6]

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