Literature DB >> 20671017

Memory and the self in autism: A review and theoretical framework.

Sophie E Lind1.   

Abstract

This article reviews research on (a) autobiographical episodic and semantic memory, (b) the self-reference effect, (c) memory for the actions of self versus other (the self-enactment effect), and (d) non-autobiographical episodic memory in autism spectrum disorder (ASD), and provides a theoretical framework to account for the bidirectional relationship between memory and the self in ASD. It is argued that individuals with ASD have diminished psychological self-knowledge (as a consequence of diagnostic social and communication impairments), alongside intact physical self-knowledge, resulting in an under-elaborated self-concept. Consequently, individuals with ASD show impaired autobiographical episodic memory and a reduced self-reference effect (which may each rely on psychological aspects of the self-concept) but do not show specific impairments in memory for their own rather than others' actions (which may rely on physical aspects of the self-concept). However, it is also argued that memory impairments in ASD (e.g., in non-autobiographical episodic memory) may not be entirely accounted for in terms of self-related processes. Other factors, such as deficits in memory binding, may also play a role. Finally, it is argued that deficits in autobiographical episodic memory and future thinking may result in a diminished temporally extended self-concept in ASD.

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Mesh:

Year:  2010        PMID: 20671017     DOI: 10.1177/1362361309358700

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Autism        ISSN: 1362-3613


  42 in total

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7.  Parents' strategies to elicit autobiographical memories in autism spectrum disorders, developmental language disorders and typically developing children.

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8.  Possible evolutionary and developmental mechanisms of mental time travel (and implications for autism).

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9.  A preliminary study of gender differences in autobiographical memory in children with an autism spectrum disorder.

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10.  Impaired social processing in autism and its reflections in memory: a deeper view of encoding and retrieval processes.

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