Social interactions can strengthen memories, but they can also contaminate them, for instance, when individuals integrate misinformation from social sources into their own memories. In two experiments, we examined such social contagion in a novel recognition-based collaboration task. Groups of three subjects studied lists of words in isolation, but unbeknownst to subjects, only half of these words were shared by the whole group. The remaining words were shared by two individuals within the group, or they were unshared, studied by single individuals only. Subjects completed a first recognition test collaboratively, and we examined how this group recognition task affected subsequent individual recognition, both for originally studied and unst...
In contrast to individual tasks, a specific social setting is created when two partners work togethe...
Tip-of-the-tongue (TOT) states are typically defined as feelings of imminent recall for known, but t...
This experiment investigated whether the exchange of information in social recall situations produce...
Collaborative memory research has focused on the negative effects of group remembering, specifically...
Humans spend a majority of their lives in a social context. So historically, several disciplines hav...
People often form and retrieve memories in the company of others. Yet, nearly 125 years of cognitive...
Memory research has primarily focused on how individuals form and maintain memories across time. How...
Collaborating with others during recall shapes both group and individual memories. Individuals contr...
Research on collaborative remembering suggests that collaboration hampers group memory (i.e., collab...
We often remember in the company of others. In particular, we routinely collaborate with friends, fa...
Experimental memory research has traditionally focused on the individual, and viewed social influenc...
When people collaborate over their recall of a shared experience, it might be expected that they cou...
The present study investigated the effects of pair collaboration and word-frequency on recognition m...
Memory researchers have spent years looking at memory in individuals rather than studying memory in ...
We modified the social contagion of memory paradigm to track whether details mentioned during social...
In contrast to individual tasks, a specific social setting is created when two partners work togethe...
Tip-of-the-tongue (TOT) states are typically defined as feelings of imminent recall for known, but t...
This experiment investigated whether the exchange of information in social recall situations produce...
Collaborative memory research has focused on the negative effects of group remembering, specifically...
Humans spend a majority of their lives in a social context. So historically, several disciplines hav...
People often form and retrieve memories in the company of others. Yet, nearly 125 years of cognitive...
Memory research has primarily focused on how individuals form and maintain memories across time. How...
Collaborating with others during recall shapes both group and individual memories. Individuals contr...
Research on collaborative remembering suggests that collaboration hampers group memory (i.e., collab...
We often remember in the company of others. In particular, we routinely collaborate with friends, fa...
Experimental memory research has traditionally focused on the individual, and viewed social influenc...
When people collaborate over their recall of a shared experience, it might be expected that they cou...
The present study investigated the effects of pair collaboration and word-frequency on recognition m...
Memory researchers have spent years looking at memory in individuals rather than studying memory in ...
We modified the social contagion of memory paradigm to track whether details mentioned during social...
In contrast to individual tasks, a specific social setting is created when two partners work togethe...
Tip-of-the-tongue (TOT) states are typically defined as feelings of imminent recall for known, but t...
This experiment investigated whether the exchange of information in social recall situations produce...