Living in history effect in the important AMs_data
收藏NIAID Data Ecosystem2026-03-12 收录
下载链接:
https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Living_in_history_effect_in_the_important_AMs_data/13489923
下载链接
链接失效反馈官方服务:
资源简介:
The tendency of a person to frequently
use public (i.e., historical) events as temporal landmarks when dating personal
memories is termed the Living in History (LiH) effect. We investigated this
effect in autobiographical memories of Bangladeshi older adults who lived
through the 1960s Bengali nationalist movement and the 1971 Bangladesh war of
independence. Four hundred seventy-six participants (Mean age = 67 years; SD =
6 years), including 62 war veterans, retrieved and dated three important
memories from their life and
completed two scales: (i) transitional impact of war scale and (ii)
generational identity scale. Results showed that one-third
of the total memories (32%) were dated using public event references,
demonstrating a clear LiH effect. However, this effect was twice as stronger among
war veterans (58%) than nonveterans (28%). The memory content analysis revealed
that public event references were mostly used to date public memories (e.g.,
war and political struggle) and memories with negative valence. Multivariate
analyses showed that veteran identity, material changes due to war and participants’
age significantly predicted the use of public event references to date one, two
or three memories relative to no use of those references. The public memories
that were personally significant and the extent participants experienced the
material changes due to war mainly caused the LiH effect. We discussed the
results considering current theories of autobiographical memory.
创建时间:
2020-12-27



