4.2 Article

Do intuitive ideas of the qualities that should characterize involuntary and voluntary memories affect their classification?

Journal

PSYCHOLOGICAL RESEARCH-PSYCHOLOGISCHE FORSCHUNG
Volume 86, Issue 1, Pages 170-195

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00426-020-01465-3

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Faculty of Philosophy of Jagiellonian University [K/DSC/004788]
  2. National Science Centre, Poland [2015/19/D/HS6/00641, UMO-2019/35/B/HS6/00528]
  3. Bekker programme from the Polish National Agency for Academic Exchange [PPN/BEK/2019/1/00092/DEC/1]

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The study explored the differences between voluntary and involuntary autobiographical memories, finding that specifying the intentionality to retrieve memories in experiments did not affect the perceived characteristics of the retrieved memories. The results suggest that the differences in these characteristics are not influenced by pre-existing metacognitive beliefs.
It is assumed that the difference between voluntary and involuntary autobiographical memories lies in the intentionality to retrieve a memory assigned by the experimenter. Memories that are retrieved when people are instructed to do so in response to cues are considered voluntary (VAMs), those that pop up spontaneously are considered involuntary (IAMs). VAMs and IAMs so classified are also found to differ in terms of phenomenological characteristics, such as perceived accessibility, vividness etc. These differences are assumed to be due to differences in intentionality and the different retrieval processes at play. It is possible, however, that these differences (which are subjective attributions of phenomenological characteristics) are the result of metacognitive beliefs of what IAMs and VAMs should be. In two experiments, we investigated the possible role of these metacognitive beliefs. Participants rated IAMs and VAMs on a number of phenomenological characteristics in two conditions, when these memories were presented in blocks that specified whether they were retrieved in a voluntary or involuntary task, or when presented in a mixed list with no information provided. If metacognitive beliefs influence the reporting of memory properties, then the block presentation would increase the differences between the characteristics of the two types of memories. The results showed that, besides replicating the characteristics of IAMs and VAMs already observed in the literature, there were almost no differences between the blocked and the mixed lists. We discuss the results as supporting the idea that the difference in characteristics attributed to IAMs and VAMs reflect a genuine difference in the nature of the retrieval and is not the result of pre-existing metacognitive belief on what a voluntary and an involuntary memory should be.

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