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Distribution of important and word-cued autobiographical memories in 20-, 35-, and 70-year-old adults.
Author(s) -
David C. Rubin,
Matthew D. Schulkind
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
psychology and aging
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.468
H-Index - 151
eISSN - 1939-1498
pISSN - 0882-7974
DOI - 10.1037/0882-7974.12.3.524
Subject(s) - psychology , autobiographical memory , cued speech , developmental psychology , word (group theory) , cognitive psychology , audiology , linguistics , recall , medicine , philosophy
For word-cued autobiographical memories, older adults had an increase, or bump, from the ages 10 to 30. All age groups had fewer memories from childhood than from other years and a power-function retention for memories from the most recent 10 years. There were no consistent differences in reaction times and rating scale responses across decades. Concrete words cued older memories, but no property of the cues predicted which memories would come from the bump. The 5 most important memories given by 20- and 35-year-old participants were distributed similarly to their word-cued memories, but those given by 70-year-old participants came mostly from the single 20-to-30 decade. No theory fully accounts for the bump.

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