Abstract

 


 



Remembering in Conversations: The Social Sharing and Reshaping of Memories


William Hirst


New School for Social Research

Gerald Echterhoff


University of Muenster

January 2012

Annual Review of Psychology, Vol. 63, pp. 55-79, 2012

Abstract:     
People constantly talk about past experiences. Burgeoning psychological research has examined the role of communication in remembering by placing rememberers in conversational settings. In reviewing this work, we first discuss the benefits of collaborative remembering (transactive memory and collaborative facilitation) and its costs (collaborative inhibition, information sampling biases, and audience tuning). We next examine how conversational remembering affects subsequent memory. Here, we address influences on listeners' memory through social contagion, resistance to such influences, and then retrieval/reexposure effects on either speaker or listener, with a focus on retrieval-induced forgetting. Extending the perspective beyond single interactions, we consider work that has explored how the above effects can spread across networks of several individuals. We also explore how a speaker's motive to form a shared reality with listeners can moderate conversational effects on memory. Finally, we discuss how these various conversational effects may promote the formation of collective memories.

Accepted Paper Series


Date posted: January 13, 2012  

Suggested Citation

Hirst, William and Echterhoff, Gerald, Remembering in Conversations: The Social Sharing and Reshaping of Memories (January 2012). Annual Review of Psychology, Vol. 63, pp. 55-79, 2012. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1982951 or http://dx.doi.org/10.1146/annurev-psych-120710-100340

Contact Information

William Hirst (Contact Author)
New School for Social Research ( email )
6 East 16th Street
New York, NY 10003
United States
Gerald Echterhoff
University of Muenster ( email )
Am Stadtgraben 9
Muenster, D-48143
Germany
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