Literature DB >> 22024614

Adaptive memory: young children show enhanced retention of fitness-related information.

Alp Aslan1, Karl-Heinz T Bäuml.   

Abstract

Evolutionary psychologists propose that human cognition evolved through natural selection to solve adaptive problems related to survival and reproduction, with its ultimate function being the enhancement of reproductive fitness. Following this proposal and the evolutionary-developmental view that ancestral selection pressures operated not only on reproductive adults, but also on pre-reproductive children, the present study examined whether young children show superior memory for information that is processed in terms of its survival value. In two experiments, we found such survival processing to enhance retention in 4- to 10-year-old children, relative to various control conditions that also required deep, meaningful processing but were not related to survival. These results suggest that, already in very young children, survival processing is a special and extraordinarily effective form of memory encoding. The results support the functional-evolutionary proposal that young children's memory is "tuned" to process and retain fitness-related information.
Copyright © 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 22024614     DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2011.10.001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cognition        ISSN: 0010-0277


  9 in total

Review 1.  A meta-analysis of the survival-processing advantage in memory.

Authors:  John E Scofield; Erin M Buchanan; Bogdan Kostic
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2018-06

2.  Adaptive memory: the survival-processing memory advantage is not due to negativity or mortality salience.

Authors:  Raoul Bell; Jan P Röer; Axel Buchner
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2013-05

3.  A set of 750 words in Spanish characterized in two survival-related dimensions: avoiding death and locating nourishment.

Authors:  María A Alonso; Emiliano Díez; Angel Fernandez
Journal:  Behav Res Methods       Date:  2021-02

4.  What kind of processing is survival processing? : Effects of different types of dual-task load on the survival processing effect.

Authors:  Meike Kroneisen; Jan Rummel; Edgar Erdfelder
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2016-11

5.  The effects of healthy aging on the mnemonic benefit of survival processing.

Authors:  Chelsea M Stillman; Jennifer H Coane; Caterina P Profaci; James H Howard; Darlene V Howard
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2014-02

6.  The survival effect in memory: does it hold into old age and non-ancestral scenarios?

Authors:  Lixia Yang; Karen P L Lau; Linda Truong
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-05-02       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  Adaptive Education: Learning and Remembering with a Stone-Age Brain.

Authors:  James S Nairne
Journal:  Educ Psychol Rev       Date:  2022-07-30

8.  Adaptive memory: evaluating alternative forms of fitness-relevant processing in the survival processing paradigm.

Authors:  Joshua Sandry; David Trafimow; Michael J Marks; Stephen Rice
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-04-09       Impact factor: 3.240

9.  How can I use it? The role of functional fixedness in the survival-processing paradigm.

Authors:  Meike Kroneisen; Michael Kriechbaumer; Siri-Maria Kamp; Edgar Erdfelder
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2021-02
  9 in total

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