Event-method directed forgetting: Forgetting a video segment is more effortful than remembering it |
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Authors: | Jonathan M. Fawcett Tracy L. Taylor Lynn Nadel |
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Affiliation: | 1. Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada;2. University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, United States |
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Abstract: | Videos were presented depicting events such as baking cookies or cleaning a fish tank. Periodically, the video paused and an instruction to Remember (R) or Forget (F) the preceding video segment was presented; the video then resumed. Participants later responded more accurately to cued-recall questions (E1) and to true/false statements (E2–5) regarding R segments than F segments. This difference was larger for specific information (the woman added 3 cups of flour) than for general information (the woman added flour). Participants were also slower to detect visual probes presented following F instructions compared to those presented following R instructions. These findings suggest that intentional forgetting is an effortful process that can be performed even on segments of otherwise continuous events and that the result is a relatively impoverished representation of the unwanted information in memory. |
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Keywords: | 2300 Human Experimental Psychology 2340 Cognitive Processes 2343 Learning & Memory |
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