Representing the collective past: public event memories and future simulations in Turkey

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

2020

Authors

Öner, Sezin
Gülgöz, Sami

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Routledge

Open Access Color

OpenAIRE Downloads

OpenAIRE Views

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

Common processes involved in remembering and predicting personal and public events have led researchers to study public events as a part of autobiographical memory. In the present study, we asked for past events and future predictions and examined the temporal distribution and factors that made these salient in event representations. A sample of 1577 individuals reported six most important public events since their birth and six future events that they expected. Past events mostly came from the recent past and were negative in valence. Similarly, future predictions consisted of negative events that are expected to occur in the near past. We did not find a reminiscence bump but there was a strong recency effect. Despite being inconsistent with some literature, this supports the view that remembering the past is largely influenced by the current goals and experiences. Also, in predicting what is remembered from the past and what is expected in the future, what individuals believed others would report appeared as a robust predictor.

Description

Keywords

Cultural Life Script, Mental Time-Travel, Reminiscence Bump, Autobiographical Memories, Temporal Distribution, Flashbulb Memories, Mechanisms, Retrieval, Thinking, Recall

Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL

Fields of Science

Citation

17

WoS Q

Q3

Scopus Q

Q1

Source

Volume

28

Issue

3

Start Page

386

End Page

398