REMEMBERING DATES OF BIRTH: MEMORY AS A DISCURSIVE PROCESS

In a descriptive study, participants were asked to recall family members’ dates of birth and describe their recall experience. The recall protocols were analyzed both in terms of the phenomenological method and performance measures. The phenomenological analysis showed that birth date recall was oft...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Algis Norvilas, Jeffrey Miller
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Vilnius University Press 2015-07-01
Series:Psichologija
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.journals.vu.lt/psichologija/article/view/8253
Description
Summary:In a descriptive study, participants were asked to recall family members’ dates of birth and describe their recall experience. The recall protocols were analyzed both in terms of the phenomenological method and performance measures. The phenomenological analysis showed that birth date recall was often mediated by referent objects that bore a logical relationship to the target date unit. Performance measures, for their part, revealed a close relationship between the use of a rule-based referent object and the recall accuracy for date of birth. Furthermore, these findings are discussed in relation to the memory for time of events literature, focusing especially on the equivalence and difference of reference objects and on the presence of scale effects.
ISSN:1392-0359
2345-0061