Activating attachment representations impact how we retrieve autobiographical memories |
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Authors: | Richard A. Bryant Agnes Bali |
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Affiliation: | School of Psychology, University of New South Wales, Kensington, Sydney, Australia |
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Abstract: | Although much research indicates that proximity to attachment figures confers many psychological benefits, there is little evidence pertaining to how attachment activation may impact autobiographical memory retrieval. Following a negative mood induction to elicit overgeneral autobiographical retrieval, participants (N?=?70) were administered an induction in which they imagined a person who is a strong attachment figure or an acquaintance. Participants then completed an autobiographical memory task to retrieve memories in response to neutral and negative cue words. Attachment priming resulted in less distress, increased retrieval of specific memories, and reduced retrieval of categoric memories. These findings indicate that activation of mental representations of attachment figures can impact on the specificity of autobiographical memory retrieval, and extends prevailing models of autobiographical memory by integrating them with attachment theory. |
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Keywords: | Attachment figures autobiographical memory specific memories attachment theory |
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