Collaborative inhibition refers to the phenomenon that when several people work together to produce a single memory report, they typically produce fewer items than when the unique items in the individual reports of the same number of participants are combined (i.e., nominal recall). Yet, apart from this negative effect, collaboration may be beneficial in that group members remove errors from a collaborative report. Collaborative inhibition studies on memory for emotional stimuli are scarce. Therefore, the present study examined both collaborative inhibition and collaborative error reduction in the recall of the details of emotional material in a laboratory setting. Female undergraduates (n = 111) viewed a film clip of a fatal accident and s...
The present research examines how the match between encoding and recall contexts influences recall p...
Humans spend a majority of their lives in a social context. So historically, several disciplines hav...
Memory research has primarily focused on how individuals form and maintain memories across time. How...
Collaborative inhibition refers to the phenomenon that when several people work together to produce ...
Collaborative recall of … 2 2 Collaborative inhibition refers to the phenomenon that when several pe...
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...
Recollection is frequently social; people tend to remember with others and when they do, their joint...
Although a group of people working together remembers more than any one individual, they recall less...
Collaborative inhibition is defined as reduced memory performance when people collaborate in a group...
Memory typically improves when recollecting in a group - the larger the group, the better the memory...
Two experiments compared collaborative and individual recall. In Experiment 1, participants encoded ...
People often form and retrieve memories in the company of others. Yet, nearly 125 years of cognitive...
Collaboration during the retrieval phase can have both negative and positive effects (referred to as...
Collaborative inhibition refers to when people working together remember less than their predicted...
The present research examines how the match between encoding and recall contexts influences recall p...
Humans spend a majority of their lives in a social context. So historically, several disciplines hav...
Memory research has primarily focused on how individuals form and maintain memories across time. How...
Collaborative inhibition refers to the phenomenon that when several people work together to produce ...
Collaborative recall of … 2 2 Collaborative inhibition refers to the phenomenon that when several pe...
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...
Recollection is frequently social; people tend to remember with others and when they do, their joint...
Although a group of people working together remembers more than any one individual, they recall less...
Collaborative inhibition is defined as reduced memory performance when people collaborate in a group...
Memory typically improves when recollecting in a group - the larger the group, the better the memory...
Two experiments compared collaborative and individual recall. In Experiment 1, participants encoded ...
People often form and retrieve memories in the company of others. Yet, nearly 125 years of cognitive...
Collaboration during the retrieval phase can have both negative and positive effects (referred to as...
Collaborative inhibition refers to when people working together remember less than their predicted...
The present research examines how the match between encoding and recall contexts influences recall p...
Humans spend a majority of their lives in a social context. So historically, several disciplines hav...
Memory research has primarily focused on how individuals form and maintain memories across time. How...