
doi: 10.3758/mc.38.8.1110
pmid: 21156874
Recent research has shown that human memory may have evolved to remember information that has been processed for the purpose of survival, more so than information that has been processed for other purposes, such as home-moving. We investigated this survival-processing advantage using both explicit and implicit memory tests. In Experiment 1, participants rated words in one of three scenarios: survival, pleasantness, and moving, followed by a timed stem-cued recall/stem-cued completion task. Items were completed more quickly in the survival scenario, as compared with the other two for the explicit task, but no differences were found across conditions in the implicit task. In Experiment 2, the implicit task was changed to concreteness judgments to encourage more conceptual processing. Again, the survival-processing advantage occurred in the explicit task (speeded item recognition), but not in the implicit task. These results suggest that a survival-processing advantage may benefit participants' memory performance only during explicit retrieval.
Affect, Judgment, Survival, Reaction Time, Humans, Retention, Psychology, Arousal, Paired-Associate Learning, Semantics
Affect, Judgment, Survival, Reaction Time, Humans, Retention, Psychology, Arousal, Paired-Associate Learning, Semantics
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