Cuc Alexandru, Ozuru Yasuhiro, Manier David, Hirst William
Department of Behavioral Sciences, Farquhar College of Arts and Sciences, Nova Southeastern University, 3301 College Avenue, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33314, USA.
Mem Cognit. 2006 Jun;34(4):752-62. doi: 10.3758/bf03193423.
To test our hypothesis that conversations can contribute to the formation of collective memory, we asked participants to study stories and to recall them individually (pregroup recollection), then as a group (group recounting), and then once again individually (postgroup recollection). One way that postgroup collective memories can be formed under these circumstances is if unshared pregroup recollections in the group recounting influences others' postgroup recollections. In the present research, we explored (using tests of recall and recognition) whether the presence of a dominant narrator can facilitate the emergence of unshared pregroup recollections in a group recounting and whether this emergence is associated with changes in postgroup recollections. We argue that the formation of a collective memory through conversation is not inevitable but is limited by cognitive factors, such as conditions for social contagion, and by situational factors, such as the presence of a narrator.
为了检验我们的假设,即对话有助于集体记忆的形成,我们要求参与者研读故事并分别进行回忆(分组前回忆),然后作为一个小组进行回忆(小组叙述),接着再次分别进行回忆(分组后回忆)。在这些情况下,形成分组后集体记忆的一种方式是,如果在小组叙述中未共享的分组前回忆会影响其他人的分组后回忆。在本研究中,我们(通过回忆和识别测试)探究了主导叙述者的存在是否能促进在小组叙述中未共享的分组前回忆的出现,以及这种出现是否与分组后回忆的变化相关。我们认为,通过对话形成集体记忆并非必然,而是受到认知因素(如社会传播条件)和情境因素(如叙述者的存在)的限制。