Concepedia

TLDR

Prospective memory involves forming intentions and later realizing them, often without an explicit retrieval cue, and this paper discusses two views on how such intentions are recalled. The study aims to examine how prospective memory is supported by automatic versus strategic processes and how task, cue, ongoing task, and individual factors influence success. The authors propose a multiprocess framework where prospective memory can arise from strategic monitoring of target events or from automatic reinstatement triggered by anticipated environmental conditions. Data show that people employ both strategic monitoring and automatic reinstatement to retrieve intentions, supporting a multiprocess view of prospective memory. © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Abstract

Abstract Prospective memory situations involve forming intentions and then realizing those intentions at some appropriate time in the future. An interesting feature of most prospective remembering is that recollection of the intended action occurs without an explicit request to attempt retrieval, and we present two views on how this type of remembering can be accomplished. One could strategically monitor the environment for the presence of the target event, or one could rely on anticipated environmental conditions more or less automatically reinstating the intended action. We present data supporting both views and argue that people use multiple approaches for solving the problem of retrieving an intention (prospective memory) after a delay. Moreover, we suggest that the extent to which prospective remembering is supported by relatively automatic processes (versus strategic resource‐demanding monitoring) and the probability with which prospective memory is likely to be successful when relying on automatic processes varies as a function of the characteristics of the prospective memory task, target cue, ongoing task, and individual. We argue that the complexity of the empirical findings can best be understood by appealing to this multiprocess view of prospective memory. Copyright © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

References

YearCitations

2013

2.8K

1980

2.7K

1991

2K

1980

1.5K

N/A

1.3K

1990

1.1K

1990

977

1997

920

1982

701

1992

555

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