Curci Antonietta, Luminet Olivier
Department of Psychology, University of Bari, Italy.
Memory. 2006 Apr;14(3):329-44. doi: 10.1080/09658210500340816.
Flashbulb memories are defined as vivid and long-lasting memories for the reception context of an important public event (Brown & Kulik, 1977). They are supposed to be triggered by both emotional reactions to the original event and rehearsal processes (Brown & Kulik, 1977; Finkenauer, Luminet, Gisle, El-Ahmadi, van der Linden, & Philippot, 1998; Neisser & Harsch, 1992). A test-retest design (21 vs 524 days after the event on average) was employed to assess flashbulb memory and event memory for the September 11th attacks and the impact of their emotional and rehearsal predictors in a sample of 985 respondents coming from six countries (i.e., Belgium, Italy, the Netherlands, Romania, Japan, and the USA). Results showed that national membership had a significant impact on event memory, and the emotional and rehearsal variables, but flashbulb memories for the September 11th attacks were found to be high and consistent across different countries. The implications of these findings for the debate about the nature and maintenance of flashbulb memories are discussed.
闪光灯记忆被定义为对重要公共事件的接收情境的生动且持久的记忆(布朗和库利克,1977)。它们被认为是由对原始事件的情感反应和复述过程触发的(布朗和库利克,1977;芬克瑙尔、卢米内、吉斯勒、埃尔 - 艾哈迈迪、范德林登和菲利普奥特,1998;奈塞尔和哈施,1992)。采用重测设计(事件发生后平均21天与524天)来评估来自六个国家(即比利时、意大利、荷兰、罗马尼亚、日本和美国)的985名受访者样本中对9·11袭击事件的闪光灯记忆和事件记忆,以及其情感和复述预测因素的影响。结果表明,国籍对事件记忆、情感和复述变量有显著影响,但发现不同国家对9·11袭击事件的闪光灯记忆都很高且一致。讨论了这些发现对关于闪光灯记忆的性质和维持的争论的意义。