Literature DB >> 23607295

Dying to remember, remembering to survive: mortality salience and survival processing.

Daniel J Burns1, Joshua Hart, Melanie E Kramer, Amy D Burns.   

Abstract

Processing items for their relevance to survival improves recall for those items relative to numerous other deep processing encoding techniques. Perhaps related, placing individuals in a mortality salient state has also been shown to enhance retention of items encoded after the morality salience manipulation (e.g., in a pleasantness rating task), a phenomenon we dubbed the "dying-to-remember" (DTR) effect. The experiments reported here further explored the effect and tested the possibility that the DTR effect is related to survival processing. Experiment 1 replicated the effect using different encoding tasks, demonstrating that the effect is not dependent on the pleasantness task. In Experiment 2 the DTR effect was associated with increases in item-specific processing, not relational processing, according to several indices. Experiment 3 replicated the main results of Experiment 2, and tested the effects of mortality salience and survival processing within the same experiment. The DTR effect and its associated difference in item-specific processing were completely eliminated when the encoding task required survival processing. These results are consistent with the interpretation that the mechanisms responsible for survival processing and DTR effects are overlapping.

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23607295     DOI: 10.1080/09658211.2013.788660

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Memory        ISSN: 0965-8211


  3 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: Independent Effects of Survival Processing and Reward Motivation on Memory.

Authors:  Glen Forester; Meike Kroneisen; Edgar Erdfelder; Siri-Maria Kamp
Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci       Date:  2020-12-10       Impact factor: 3.169

3.  Both the Survival Scenario and the Death Scenario Improve Memory Recall Regardless of the Processing/Priming Paradigm.

Authors:  Xiaolin Zhao; Hao Li; Xinxin Zhang; Juan Yang
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2018-05-28
  3 in total

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