Abstract

Previous research suggests that, with the passage of time, representations of self in episodic memory become less dependent on their initial (internal) vantage point and shift toward an external perspective that is normally characteristic of how other people are represented. The present experiment examined this phenomenon in both episodic and semantic autobiographical memory using latency of self-judgments as a measure of accessibility of the internal vs. the external perspective. Results confirmed that in the case of representations of the self retrieved from recent autobiographical memories, trait-judgments regarding unobservable self-aspects (internal perspective) were faster than trait judgments regarding observable self-aspects (external perspective). Yet, in the case of self-representations retrieved from memories of a more distant past, judgments regarding observable self-aspects were faster. Those results occurred for both self-representations retrieved from episodic memory and for representations retrieved from the semantic memory. In addition, regardless of the effect of time, greater accessibility of unobservable (vs. observable) self-aspects was associated with the episodic rather than semantic autobiographical memory. Those results were modified by neither declared trait’s self-descriptiveness (yes vs. no responses) nor by its desirability (highly desirable vs. moderately desirable traits). Implications for compatibility between how self and others are represented and for the role of self in social perception are discussed.

Highlights

  • No sense of personal identity and continuity of the self could exist without memories involving one’s past (Wilson and Ross, 2003)

  • A 2 × 2 mixed model analysis of variance (ANOVA) was performed on length of the descriptions. This analysis revealed a significant effect of the memory type with longer descriptions in the episodic memory, M = 64.97 words, compared to the semantic memory condition, M = 38.41 words, F(1,94) = 23.25, p < 0.001, η2 = 0.20, a result consistent with a more detailed content of episodic memories

  • In the case of representations of the self retrieved from recent autobiographical memories, trait-judgments regarding unobservable selfaspects are faster than trait judgments regarding observable self-aspects, indicating greater accessibility of unobservable self-aspects

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Summary

Introduction

No sense of personal identity and continuity of the self could exist without memories involving one’s past (Wilson and Ross, 2003). Such autobiographical memories may differ with respect to their event-specificity. The cognitive representations of self emerging as a common threat embodied in our autobiographical memories, regardless of their situation-specificity, are both multi-faceted and dynamic They become activated – or constructed – depending on chronic accessibility and situational cues (Kihlstrom et al, 2003; Conway, 2005; McConnell, 2011; Skowronski, 2012; McConnell et al, 2013). In addition to specificity, such self-representations can differ in a variety of other ways, including content, predominant modality (verbal, visual, visceral, etc.), evaluative/affective tone, and perspective (internal vs. external)

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