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First published online June 1, 2010

Mine to remember: The impact of ownership on recollective experience

Abstract

Evaluating information with reference to self is associated with enhanced memory, the “self-reference effect”. The effect is found in recognition accompanied by recollective experience (remembering), but not in recognition based on a feeling of knowing. The current research employed an ownership procedure to investigate whether less evaluative forms of self-referential cognition produce similar enhancement of recollective experience. Participants were asked to sort items into baskets that belonged to themselves or a fictitious other. A subsequent remember–know recognition test showed that items encoded in the context of self-ownership were more likely to be correctly recognized than other-owned items. This ownership effect was found in remember, but not know, responses. This finding suggests that creating a self-referential encoding context leads to elaborative representations in episodic memory, even in the absence of explicit self-evaluation.

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Published In

Article first published online: June 1, 2010
Issue published: June 2010

Keywords

  1. Self
  2. Ownership
  3. Recollective experience
  4. Remember–know
  5. Self-reference effect

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© 2010 Experimental Pscyhology Society.
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PubMed: 20401814

Authors

Affiliations

Mirjam van den Bos
University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK
Sheila J. Cunningham
University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK
Martin A. Conway
Institute of Psychological Sciences, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK
David J. Turk
University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK

Notes

School of Psychology, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK, Email: [email protected]
This research was supported by a grant from the European Research Council (202893) awarded to David Turk. The authors would like to thank two anonymous reviewers for their constructive comments.

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