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The Emergence of Autobiographical Memory: A Social Cultural Developmental Theory.
1.6K
Citations
152
References
2004
Year
Social PsychologyEducationHuman MemoryCognitive AnthropologyHuman Autobiographical MemoryExplicit MemoryPsychologySocial SciencesDevelopmental PsychologyCognitive DevelopmentCultural MemoryMemorySocial IdentityCognitive ScienceCultural RealityEarly Childhood DevelopmentAutobiographical MemorySocial CognitionAdult Memory TalkChild DevelopmentCultureSocial MemoryCross-cultural PerspectiveBasic Memory AbilitiesDevelopmental ScienceCultural AnthropologyCultural Psychology
The authors present a multicomponent dynamic developmental theory of human autobiographical memory that emerges gradually across the preschool years. The components that contribute to the process of emergence include basic memory abilities, language and narrative, adult memory talk, temporal understanding, and understanding of self and others. The authors review the empirical developmental evidence within each of these components to show how each contributes to the timing, quantity, and quality of personal memories from the early years of life. The authors then consider the relevance of the theory to explanations of childhood amnesia and how the theory accounts for and predicts the complex findings on adults' earliest memories, including individual, gender, and cultural differences.
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