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Exploring Mechanisms of Selective Directed Forgetting

[PDF] AguirreRodriguez_ForgettingMemory.pdf (783.0Ko)
Identificadores
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10481/45629
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00316
ISSN: 1664-1078
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Estadísticas
Statistiques d'usage de visualisation
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Auteur
Aguirre Rodríguez, Carmen; Gómez Ariza, Carlos Javier; Andrés, Pilar; Mazzoni, Giuliana; Bajo Molina, María Teresa
Editorial
Frontiers Media
Materia
Episodic memory
 
Motivated forgetting
 
Selective directed forgetting
 
Executive control
 
Inhibition
 
Date
2017
Referencia bibliográfica
Aguirre Rodríguez, C.; et al. Exploring Mechanisms of Selective Directed Forgetting. Frontiers in Psychology, 8: 316 (2017). [http://hdl.handle.net/10481/45629]
Patrocinador
The current research was completed thanks to financial aid provided by the doctoral research grant FPI BES-2009-026811 to CA, and by grants from the Spanish Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad to MB (PSI2012-33625, PSI2015-65502, and PCIN-2015-132), and to CG-A (PSI2011-25797 and PSI2015-65502-C2-2-P), and by the Andalusian Government to MB (P12-CTS-2369-Fondos Feder).
Résumé
While some studies have shown that providing a cue to selectively forget one subset of previously learned facts may cause specific forgetting of this information, little is known about the mechanisms underlying this memory phenomenon. In three experiments, we aimed to better understand the nature of the selective directed forgetting (SDF) effect. Participants studied a List 1 consisting of 18 sentences regarding two (or three) different characters and a List 2 consisting of sentences regarding an additional character. In Experiment 1, we explored the role of rehearsal as the mechanism producing SDF by examining the effect of articulatory suppression after List 1 and during List 2 presentation. In Experiments 2 and 3, we explored the role of attentional control mechanisms by introducing a concurrent updating task after List 1 and during List 2 (Experiment 2) and by manipulating the number of characters to be selectively forgotten (1 out of 3 vs. 2 out of 3). Results from the three experiments suggest that neither rehearsal nor context change seem to be the mechanisms underlying SDF, while the pattern of results is consistent with an inhibitory account. In addition, whatever the responsible mechanism is, SDF seems to rely on the available attentional resources and the demands of the task. Our results join other findings to show that SDF is a robust phenomenon and suggest boundary conditions for the effect to be observed.
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