Publication | Closed Access
Directed forgetting between, but not within, dissociative personality states.
80
Citations
28
References
2003
Year
Memory RetrievalNeuropsychologyAffective NeuroscienceIndividual DifferencesCognitionDirected ForgettingExplicit MemorySocial SciencesPsychologyRetrieval InhibitionMemoryCognitive SciencePsychiatryExperimental PsychologyImplicit MemoryAssociative Memory (Psychology)Dissociative Personality StatesMemory AssessmentMemory LossPsychopathology
To investigate amnesia between identities in dissociative identity disorder (DID), the authors assessed explicit and implicit memory performance on a directed-forgetting task in 12 DID patients who switched from one state to an "amnesic" state between presentation and memory testing. DID patients were instructed either to remember or to forget neutral and emotional words. Besides an overall decrease in explicit memory, patients demonstrated selective forgetting of to-be-forgotten, but not of to-be-remembered words in the amnesic state. Patients did not exhibit any directed forgetting within the same state. Implicit memory was fully preserved across states. Independent of state, patients recalled more emotional than neutral information. These results may extend the conceptualization of memory processes in DID, suggesting an important role for retrieval inhibition.
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