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Reaping what they sow: Benefits of remembering together in intimate couples
Affiliation:1. Université catholique de Louvain, Belgium;2. University Paris Descartes, France;3. University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia;4. University of Bordeaux, France;5. Belgian Fund for Scientific Research (FRS-FNRS), Belgium
Abstract:Recent research suggests that remembering with a long-term partner may scaffold successful memory. To test whether collaboration reduces the episodic deficit shown by older adults, we created a social version of Addis, Musicaro, Pan, and Schacter's (2010) episodic memory paradigm. As predicted, in Experiment 1 20 long-married, older adult couples generated more “internal” – on topic, episodic – details when they remembered together versus alone, but the same amount of “external” – off-topic, semantic – details. In Experiment 2 this memory benefit did not extend to 20 young adult couples who generated high levels of internal details together or alone. Notably, however, young adults’ self-reported relationship intimacy was related to their episodic recall across conditions. We discuss these findings in terms of possible benefits of collaboration in the face of ageing and cognitive decline as well as the development over time of “transactive memory systems” in intimate relationships.
Keywords:Social memory  Transactive memory  Social scaffolding  Episodic memory  Collaborative memory
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