2017
DOI: 10.1080/09658211.2016.1274405
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“Going episodic”: collaborative inhibition and facilitation when long-married couples remember together

Abstract: Two complementary approaches to the study of collaborative remembering have produced contrasting results. In the experimental “collaborative recall” approach within cognitive psychology, collaborative remembering typically results in ‘collaborative inhibition’: laboratory groups recall fewer items than their estimated potential. In the cognitive ageing approach, collaborative remembering with a partner or spouse may provide cuing and support to benefit older adults’ performance on everyday memory tasks. To com… Show more

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Cited by 32 publications
(46 citation statements)
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“…This heterogeneity adds complexity and nuance to predictions about where we might expect to find collaborative benefits and effective transactive memory systems. To some extent, such benefits have proved relatively elusive (Barnier et al., ; Harris et al., ; ), at least when recall output is measured in terms of amount recalled. It appears that shared experiences and intimacy are necessary but not sufficient for collaborative benefits to emerge, which may help to explain why previous research on the effects of collaboration in intimate groups versus strangers has yielded mixed results, and generalized benefits for intimate groups have been difficult to identify (Andersson & Rönnberg, , ; Gould et al., ; Harris et al., ; Wegner et al., ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This heterogeneity adds complexity and nuance to predictions about where we might expect to find collaborative benefits and effective transactive memory systems. To some extent, such benefits have proved relatively elusive (Barnier et al., ; Harris et al., ; ), at least when recall output is measured in terms of amount recalled. It appears that shared experiences and intimacy are necessary but not sufficient for collaborative benefits to emerge, which may help to explain why previous research on the effects of collaboration in intimate groups versus strangers has yielded mixed results, and generalized benefits for intimate groups have been difficult to identify (Andersson & Rönnberg, , ; Gould et al., ; Harris et al., ; Wegner et al., ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The experimenter told them to “Try to make your list as long as possible.” Participants were given 2 min to recall as many names as they could, and the experimenter instructed them to keep trying to recall additional names until 2 min had elapsed. Session times were based on prior research in which we have conducted these kinds of recall tasks with older adults (e.g., Harris et al., , ) and were designed to be sufficient for recall to proceed until blocked while constraining the overall length of the experimental session.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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