Article, 2021

Properties of autobiographical memories are reliable and stable individual differences

Cognition, ISSN 0010-0277, 1873-7838, Volume 210, Page 104583, 10.1016/j.cognition.2021.104583

Contributors

Rubin, David C (Corresponding author) [1] [2]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Aarhus University
  2. [NORA names: AU Aarhus University; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];
  3. [2] Duke University
  4. [NORA names: United States; America, North; OECD]

Abstract

Autobiographical memory research typically focuses on individual memories with variability in individual participants' responses serving as error variance. Integrating individual-difference and experimental approaches demonstrated that properties of autobiographical memories are stable individual differences with stable patterns of correlations. In two sessions approximately one week apart, different cues were used to prompt seven autobiographical memories. Each memory was rated on 12 properties including visual imagery, emotional intensity, narrative coherence, reliving, and past rehearsals. In two studies with samples from different populations (Ns of 200 and 160), each property had a high reliability in both sessions (median α = .90), and the mean of each property averaged over seven memories correlated highly with itself over sessions (median r = .72). Multiple regressions predicting three properties from Session 1 with the remaining nine properties of Session 2 and exploratory factor analyses yielded solutions consistent with expectations from studies of individual memories. Moreover, the correlation matrices of the 12 properties across studies and sessions were extremely similar. Thus, separate sessions, cues, samples, and properties provided generalizable data about individual differences in autobiographical memory. Practical, theoretical, and methodological implications include that individual differences in memory affect: life stories and narrative structure internal to events, stable clinical syndromes and symptoms, experimental results previously attributed to the properties of individual memories, and the confidence people have in the accuracy of their autobiographical and episodic memories.

Keywords

accuracy, analysis, approach, autobiographical, autobiographical memory, autobiographical memory research, clinical syndrome, coherence, confidence, confidence people, consistent with expectations, correlation, correlation matrix, cues, data, differences, emotional intensity, episodic memory, error, error variance, events, expectations, experimental approach, experimental results, exploratory factor analysis, factor analysis, imagery, implications, individual differences, individual memory, individual-difference, intensity, life, life stories, matrix, memory, memory research, methodological implications, multiple regression, narrative coherence, narrative structure, participants, participants' responses, pattern of correlations, people, population, properties, properties of autobiographical memories, regression, rehearsal, reliability, research, response, results, samples, session 2, sessions, solution, stable individual differences, stable pattern, story, structure, study, study of individual memory, symptoms, syndrome, variables, variance, visual imagery, weeks

Funders

  • Danish National Research Foundation

Data Provider: Digital Science