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Article
Revelation effects in remembering, forecasting, and perspective taking
Memory & Cognition (2017)
  • Marianne E. Lloyd
  • Deanne L. Westerman
  • Jeremy K. Miller
Abstract
The revelation effect is a robust phenomenon in episodic memory whereby stimuli that immediately follow a simple cognitive task are more likely to garner positive responses on a variety of memory tests, including autobiographical memory judgments. Six experiments investigated the revelation effect for judgments of past and future events as well as judgments made from others’ perspectives. The purpose of this work was to determine whether these subjectively distinct judgments are subject to the same decision-making biases, as might be expected if they are governed by similar processes (e.g., Schacter, Addis, & Buckner 2007). College-aged participants were asked to rate a variety of life events according to whether the events had occurred during their childhoods or would occur during the next 10 years. Events that followed an anagram task were judged as more likely to have happened in the past and more likely to occur in the future. We also showed a revelation effect when participants were asked to adopt the perspective of others when making judgments about past and future events. When the task was reworded to be non-episodic (participants judged how common the events were during childhood and adulthood), no revelation effect was found for either past or future time frames, which suggests common boundary conditions for both types of judgments. The results are consistent with studies showing strong parallels between remembering and other forms of self-projection but not with semantic memory judgments.
Keywords
  • Revelation effect,
  • Forecasting,
  • Self-projection,
  • Theory of mind,
  • Autobiographical memory
Publication Date
May 4, 2017
DOI
10.3758/s13421-017-0710-7
Citation Information
Marianne E. Lloyd, Deanne L. Westerman and Jeremy K. Miller. "Revelation effects in remembering, forecasting, and perspective taking" Memory & Cognition Vol. 45 Iss. 6 (2017) p. 1002 - 1013
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/marianne_lloyd/21/