| Literature DB >> 29066962 |
Xinrui Mao1,2, Yujuan Wang2, Yanhong Wu1, Chunyan Guo2,3.
Abstract
Directed forgetting (DF) assists in preventing outdated information from interfering with cognitive processing. Previous studies pointed that self-referential items alleviated DF effects due to the elaboration of encoding processes. However, the retrieval mechanism of this phenomenon remains unknown. Based on the dual-process framework of recognition, the retrieval of self-referential information was involved in familiarity and recollection. Using source memory tasks combined with event-related potential (ERP) recording, our research investigated the retrieval processes of alleviative DF effects elicited by self-referential information. The FN400 (frontal negativity at 400 ms) is a frontal potential at 300-500 ms related to familiarity and the late positive complex (LPC) is a later parietal potential at 500-800 ms related to recollection. The FN400 effects of source memory suggested that familiarity processes were promoted by self-referential effects without the modulation of to-be-forgotten (TBF) instruction. The ERP results of DF effects were involved with LPCs of source memory, which indexed retrieval processing of recollection. The other-referential source memory of TBF instruction caused the absence of LPC effects, while the self-referential source memory of TBF instruction still elicited the significant LPC effects. Therefore, our neural findings suggested that self-referential processing improved both familiarity and recollection. Furthermore, the self-referential processing advantage which was caused by the autobiographical retrieval alleviated retrieval inhibition of DF, supporting that the self-referential source memory alleviated DF effects.Entities:
Keywords: ERP; directed forgetting; retrieval; self-referential information; source memory
Year: 2017 PMID: 29066962 PMCID: PMC5641308 DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2017.00187
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Behav Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5153 Impact factor: 3.558
Figure 1Experimental paradigm. In our experiment, participants completed a study phase immediately followed by a test phase. During the study phase, participants were explicitly instructed to follow the instruction to remember “to-be-remembered”, (TBR) both the noun and its source (personal pronoun) or to forget “to-be-forgotten”, (TBF) them. During the test phase, participants were asked to make a response of Self (S), Other (O) or New (N).
Behavioral results.
| Accuracy | RTs | |
|---|---|---|
| TBR_S | 0.65 (0.10) | 1098.61 (124.66) |
| TBF_S | 0.47 (0.09) | 1196.29 (133.54) |
| TBR_O | 0.58 (0.11) | 1121.90 (123.85) |
| TBF_O | 0.47 (0.11) | 1192.53 (142.39) |
| CR | 0.73 (0.13) | 1046.95 (133.25) |
*Standard deviations in parentheses. Abbreviations: TBR_S, “to be remembered- self”; TBF_S, “to be forgotten-self”; TBR_O, “to be remembered-other”; TBF_O, “to be forgotten-other”; CR, correct rejection.
Figure 2Source-correct event-related potentials (ERPs) of conditions. (A) Grand average ERP waveforms of source-correct (SC) trials for “to be remembered- self” (TBR_S), “to be remembered-other” (TBR_O), “to be forgotten-self” (TBF_S) and “to be forgotten-other” (TBF_O) conditions, and correct rejection (CR). (B) During late positive complex (LPC; 500–800 ms) time windows of source memory, topographic maps of differential amplitudes showed old-new ERP effects (SC-CR) for “to be remembered-self” (TBR_S), “to be remembered-other” (TBR_O), “to be forgotten-self” (TBF_S) and “to be forgotten-other” (TBF_O) conditions.