Rotman Research Institute of Baycrest Centre, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Mem Cognit. 2010 Jul;38(5):531-40. doi: 10.3758/MC.38.5.531.
The capacity to think about specific events that one might encounter in the future--episodic future thought--involves the flexible (re)organization of memory. The present study demonstrates that implicit processes play an important role here. In two experiments (N = 180), participants were asked to generate a personal event that they expected to plausibly occur in the following week. The content of the participants' responses was biased (i.e., primed) by recent thoughts about a specific category of experiences. For instance, participants who had recently been induced to think about social experiences, in the context of an ostensibly unrelated task, were more likely than nonprimed participants to generate similar events occurring in their immediate future. Importantly, the participants were unaware of this unintentional influence of memory. The theoretical and practical implications of these findings for understanding episodic future thought and its relation to memory are discussed.
人们能够思考未来可能遇到的特定事件,即情节性未来思维,这涉及到记忆的灵活(重新)组织。本研究表明,内隐过程在此起着重要作用。在两项实验中(N=180),要求参与者生成一个他们预计在接下来一周内可能发生的个人事件。参与者的反应内容受到近期特定类别的经验的影响(即被启动)。例如,与非启动参与者相比,那些最近在表面上不相关的任务背景下被诱导思考社交经验的参与者更有可能生成类似的事件,这些事件发生在他们的近期未来。重要的是,参与者没有意识到记忆的这种无意识影响。讨论了这些发现对于理解情节性未来思维及其与记忆的关系的理论和实践意义。