scispace - formally typeset
Book ChapterDOI

List-Method Directed Forgetting in Cognitive and Clinical Research: A Theoretical and Methodological Review

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
The authors provide an up-to-date review of the twenty-first century research and theory on list-method directed forgetting (DF) and related phenomena like the context-change effect.
Abstract
The primary purpose of this chapter is to provide an up-to-date review of the twenty-first century research and theory on list-method directed forgetting (DF) and related phenomena like the context-change effect. Many researchers have assumed that DF is diagnostic of inhibition, but we argue for an alternative, noninhibitory account and suggest reinterpretation of earlier findings. We first describe what DF is and the state of the art with regard to measuring the effect. Then, we review recent evidence that brings DF into the family of effects that can be explained by global memory models. The process-based theory we advocate is that the DF impairment arises from mental context change and that the DF benefits emerge mainly but perhaps not exclusively from changes in encoding strategy. We review evidence (some new to this paper) that strongly suggests that DF arises from the engagement of controlled forgetting strategies that are independent of whether people believed the forget cue or not. Then we describe the vast body of literature supporting that forgetting strategies result in contextual change effects, as well as point out some inconsistencies in the DF literature that need to be addressed in future research. Next, we provide evidence—again, some of it new to this chapter—that the reason people show better memory after a forget cue is that they change encoding strategies. In addition to reviewing the basic research with healthy population, we reinterpret the evidence from the literature on certain clinical populations, providing a critique of the work done to date and outlining ways of improving the methodology for the study of DF in special populations. We conclude with a critical discussion of alternative approaches to understanding DF.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Neural mechanisms of motivated forgetting

TL;DR: A neurobiological model of memory control can inform disordered control over memory and electrophysiological activity during motivated forgetting implicates active inhibition.
Journal ArticleDOI

Saving-Enhanced Memory The Benefits of Saving on the Learning and Remembering of New Information

TL;DR: The results suggest that saving provides a means to strategically off-load memory onto the environment in order to reduce the extent to which currently unneeded to-be-remembered information interferes with the learning and remembering of other information.
Journal ArticleDOI

Active Forgetting: Adaptation of Memory by Prefrontal Control

TL;DR: A core discovery concerns the role of the prefrontal cortex in exerting top-down control over mnemonic activity in the hippocampus and other brain structures, often via inhibitory control.
Journal ArticleDOI

Retrieval Potentiates New Learning: A Theoretical and Meta-analytic review

TL;DR: A quantitative review of the literature showed that testing reliably potentiates the future learning of new materials by increasing correct recall or by reducing erroneous intrusions, and several factors have a powerful impact on whether testing potentiates or impairs new learning.
Journal ArticleDOI

The human hippocampus contributes to both the recollection and familiarity components of recognition memory

TL;DR: High-frequency activity is measured in subjects undergoing direct brain recordings and found that hippocampal HFA dissociated based on both the stimulus evidence presented and the response choice, indicating that the hippocampus supports both the recollection and familiarity processes.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Can encoding differences explain the benefits of directed forgetting in the list-method paradigm?

TL;DR: In this article, the benefits of directed forgetting are explained by the differences in recall arising from individual strategy choices used to encode List 2, and the benefits are best explained by a more frequent use of deeper encoding of the second list by the forget group participants.
Journal ArticleDOI

The directed forgetting task: application to emotionally valent material.

TL;DR: The directed forgetting task could be usefully extended to investigate cognition-emotion interactions in clinical populations and showed that the depressed subjects showed a retrieval facilitation for to-be-forgotten negative adjectives, an effect that was not present for the other two groups.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Stroop Task and Attention Deficits in Schizophrenia: A Critical Evaluation of Card and Single-Trial Stroop Methodologies

TL;DR: It is concluded that single-trial versions of the Stroop task provide greater sensitivity to selective attention pathology in schizophrenia.
Journal ArticleDOI

Output Interference in the Recall of Categorized and Paired-Associate Lists

TL;DR: This paper showed that the act of recall can itself serve as a source of forgetting, and that the output interference was most dramatic for the last two or three items, but there was some evidence that the last category recall was not affected by the number of words recalled from prior categories.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the regulation of recollection: The intentional forgetting of stereotypical memories

TL;DR: The authors investigated the process through which social perceivers inhibit the retrieval of stereotypic information from long-term memory (i.e., intentional forgetting) and found that the task of inhibiting stereotype-congruent memories made notable demands on participants' attentional resources.
Related Papers (5)