Abstract
Background: Self-defining memories refer to events that are vivid, effectively intense, and include enduring concerns about oneself.
Objective: We investigated the relationship between the production of these memories in normal aging and the ability to integrate new information into existing knowledge in memory (i.e., updating). Method: Older participants were asked to perform an updating task as well as to retrieve autobiographical memories that were later analyzed for their self-defining relevance. Results: Analyses showed significant positive correlations between updating and the production of self-defining memories. Conclusion: Updating our life story is an important psychological process,which enables us to refine and enrich our life story with new experiences, roles and/or challenges, and this ability seems to be related to the capacity to produce memories that draw on the pursuit of long-term goals, meaning making, emotional regulation, and/or activation of self-images (i.e., self-defining memories). These findings suggest that updating one’s identity throughout life, at least in normal aging, may be related to the shaping and retrieval of self-defining memories, memories that lead to the creation of narrative scripts, which themselves serve as the ingredients for “chapters” across the lifespan.Keywords: Aging, autobiographical memory, executive function, self-defining memories, updating, normal aging.
Graphical Abstract
[1]
Singer JA, Rexhaj B, Baddeley J. Older, wiser, and happier? Comparing older adults’ and college students’ self-defining memories. Memory 2007; 15(8): 886-98.
[2]
Blagov PS, Singer JA. Four dimensions of self‐defining memories (specificity, meaning, content, and affect) and their relationships to self‐restraint, distress, and repressive defensiveness. J Pers 2004; 72(3): 481-511.
[3]
Singer JA, Blagov P, Berry M, Oost KM. Self-defining memories, scripts, and the life story: Narrative identity in personality and psychotherapy. J Pers 2013; 81(6): 569-82.
[4]
Conway MA, Singer JA, Tagini A. The self and autobiographical memory: Correspondence and coherence. Soc Cogn 2004; 22(5): 491-529.
[5]
Moffitt KH, Singer JA. Continulty in the life story: Self-defining memories, affect, and approach/avoidance personal strivings. J Pers 1994; 62(1): 21-43.
[6]
D’Argembeau A, Lardi C. Van der LM. Self-defining future projections: Exploring the identity function of thinking about the future. Memory 2012; 20(2): 110-20.
[7]
Thorne A, McLean KC, Lawrence AM. When remembering is not enough: reflecting on self-defining memories in late adolescence. J Pers 2004; 72(3): 513-42.
[8]
Lardi C, D’Argembeau A, Chanal J, Ghisletta P. Van der LM. Further characterisation of self-defining memories in young adults: A study of a Swiss sample. Memory 2010; 18(3): 293-309.
[9]
Wood WJ, Conway MA. Subjective impact, meaning making, and current and recalled emotions for self-defining memories. J Pers 2006; 74(3): 811-45.
[10]
Sutin AR, Robins RW. Continuity and correlates of emotions and motives in self-defining memories. J Pers 2005; 73(3): 793-824.
[11]
Lardi C, Ghisletta P. Van der LM. What is the nature of the self-defining memories of repression-prone individuals? Self Ident 2012; 11(4): 492-515.
[12]
Çili S, Stopa L. The retrieval of self-defining memories is associated with the activation of specific working selves. Memory 2015; 23(2): 233-53.
[13]
Thorne A, McLean K. Gendered reminiscence practices and self-definition in late adolescence. Sex Roles 2002; 46(9-10): 267-77.
[14]
El Haj M, Antoine P, Nandrino JL, Gely-Nargeot MC, Raffard S. Self-defining memories during exposure to music in Alzheimer’s disease. Int Psychogeriatr 2015; 27(10): 1719-30.
[15]
Martinelli P, Anssens A, Sperduti M, Piolino P. The influence of normal aging and Alzheimer’s disease in autobiographical memory highly related to the self. Neuropsychology 2013; 27(1): 69-78.
[16]
Addis DR, Wong AT, Schacter DL. Age-related changes in the episodic simulation of future events. Psychol Sci 2008; 19(1): 33-41.
[17]
Levine B, Svoboda E, Hay JF, Winocur G, Moscovitch M. Aging and autobiographical memory: Dissociating episodic from semantic retrieval. Psychol Aging 2002; 17(4): 677-89.
[18]
Piolino P, Desgranges B, Clarys D, Guillery-Girard B, Taconnat L, Isingrini M, et al. Autobiographical memory, autonoetic consciousness, and self-perspective in aging. Psychol Aging 2006; 21(3): 510-25.
[19]
Piolino P, Coste C, Martinelli P, Mace AL, Quinette P, Guillery-Girard B, et al. Reduced specificity of autobiographical memory and aging: Do the executive and feature binding functions of working memory have a role? Neuropsychologia 2010; 48(2): 429-40.
[20]
St Jacques PL, Levine B. Ageing and autobiographical memory for emotional and neutral events. Memory 2007; 15(2): 129-44.
[21]
Habermas T, Diel V, Welzer H. Lifespan trends of autobiographical remembering: Episodicity and search for meaning. Conscious Cogn 2013; 22(3): 1061-73.
[22]
El Haj M, Clément S, Fasotti L, Allain P. Effects of music on autobiographical verbal narration in Alzheimer’s disease. J Neurolinguist 2013; 26(6): 691-700.
[23]
El Haj M, Fasotti L, Allain P. The involuntary nature of music-evoked autobiographical memories in Alzheimer’s disease. Conscious Cogn 2012; 21(1): 238-46.
[24]
El Haj M, Postal V, Allain P. Music enhances autobiographical memory in mild Alzheimer’s disease. Educ Gerontol 2012; 38(1): 30-41.
[25]
Folstein MF, Folstein SE, McHugh PR. “Mini-mental state”. A practical method for grading the cognitive state of patients for the clinician. J Psychiatr Res 1975; 12(3): 189-98.
[26]
Yesavage JA, Sheikh JI. 9/Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS) recent evidence and development of a shorter violence. Clin Gerontol 1986; 5(1-2): 165-73.
[28]
Miyake A, Friedman NP, Emerson MJ, Witzki AH, Howerter A, Wager TD. The unity and diversity of executive functions and their contributions to complex “frontal lobe” tasks: A latent variable analysis. Cognit Psychol 2000; 41(1): 49-100.
[29]
Addis DR, Roberts RP, Schacter DL. Age-related neural changes in autobiographical remembering and imagining. Neuropsychologia 2011; 49(13): 3656-69.
[30]
Piolino P, Desgranges B, Benali K, Eustache F. Episodic and semantic remote autobiographical memory in ageing. Memory 2002; 10(4): 239-57.
[31]
El Haj M, Antoine P, Kapogiannis D. Similarity between remembering the past and imagining the future in Alzheimer’s disease: Implication of episodic memory. Neuropsychologia 2015; 66(0): 119-25.
[32]
El Haj M, Antoine P, Kapogiannis D. Flexibility decline contributes to similarity of past and future thinking in Alzheimer’s disease. Hippocampus 2015; 25(11): 1447-55.
[33]
El Haj M, Delerue C, Omigie D, Antoine P, Nandrino JL, Boucart M. Autobiographical recall triggers visual exploration. J Eye Mov Res 2014; 7(5): 1-7.
[34]
Brennan RL, Prediger DJ. Coefficient kappa: Some uses, misuses, and alternatives. Educ Psychol Meas 1981; 41(3): 687-99.
[35]
Kopelman MD. The Autobiographical Memory Interview (AMI) in organic and psychogenic amnesia. Memory 1994; 2(2): 211-35.
[36]
Conway MA, Pleydell-Pearce CW. The construction of autobiographical memories in the self-memory system. Psychol Rev 2000; 107(2): 261-88.
[38]
El Haj M, Antoine P, Nandrino JL, Kapogiannis D. Autobiographical memory decline in Alzheimer's disease, a theoretical and clinical overview. Ageing Res Rev 2015; 23(Pt B): 183-92.
[39]
El Haj M, Roche J, Gallouj K, Gandolphe MC. Autobiographical memory compromise in Alzheimer’s disease: A cognitive and clinical overview. Geriatr Psychol Neuropsychiatr Vieil 2017; 15(4): 443-51.
[40]
Dalgleish T, Williams JM, Golden AM, Perkins N, Barrett LF, Barnard PJ, et al. Reduced specificity of autobiographical memory and depression: The role of executive control. J Exp Psychol Gen 2007; 136(1): 23-42.
[41]
Williams JM, Barnhofer T, Crane C, Herman D, Raes F, Watkins E, et al. Autobiographical memory specificity and emotional disorder. Psychol Bull 2007; 133(1): 122-48.
[42]
Sperduti M, Martinelli P, Kalenzaga S, Devauchelle AD, Lion S, Malherbe C, et al. Don’t be too strict with yourself! rigid negative self-representation in healthy subjects mimics the neurocognitive profile of depression for autobiographical memory. Front Behav Neurosci 2013; 7: 41.
[43]
El Haj M, Postal V, Le Gall D, Allain P. Directed forgetting of autobiographical memory in mild Alzheimer’s disease. Memory 2011; 19(8): 993-1003.
[44]
Hasher L, Lustig C, Zacks R. Inhibitory mechanisms and the control of attention. Var Work Memory 2007; pp. 227-49.
[45]
El Haj M, Gandolphe MC, Allain P, Fasotti L, Antoine P. “Forget to whom you have told this proverb”: Directed forgetting of destination memory in Alzheimer’s disease. Behav Neurol 2015; 2015215971
[46]
El Haj M, Fasotti L, Allain P. Directed forgetting of source memory in normal aging and Alzheimer’s disease. Aging Clin Exp Res 2015; 27(3): 329-36.