Why are you telling me that?: A conceptual model of the social function of autobiographical memory

Author
Abstract
In an effort to stimulate and guide empirical work within a functional framework, this paper provides a conceptual model of the social functions of autobiographical memory (AM) across the lifespan. The model delineates the processes and variables involved when AMs are shared to serve social functions. Components of the model include: lifespan contextual influences, the qualitative characteristics of memory (emotionality and level of detail recalled), the speaker s characteristics (age, gender, and personality), the familiarity and similarity of the listener to the speaker, the level of responsiveness during the memory-sharing process, and the nature of the social relationship in which the memory sharing occurs (valence and length of the relationship). These components are shown to influence the type of social function served and/or, the extent to which social functions are served. Directions for future empirical work to substantiate the model and hypotheses derived from the model are provided.
Notes
From the library of John McKendy
Year of Publication
2003
Journal
Memory
Volume
11
Issue
2
Pagination
165-178
DOI
10.1080/741938207
Alea, N., and S. Bluck. 2003. “Why Are You Telling Me That?: A Conceptual Model Of The Social Function Of Autobiographical Memory”. Memory 11 (2): 165-178. doi:10.1080/741938207.
Journal Article