Department of Psychology, Harvard University.
Psychol Sci. 2018 Jun;29(6):936-946. doi: 10.1177/0956797617753936. Epub 2018 Apr 12.
People frequently engage in future thinking in everyday life, but it is unknown how simulating an event in advance changes how that event is remembered once it takes place. To initiate study of this important topic, we conducted two experiments in which participants simulated emotional events before learning the hypothetical outcome of each event via narratives. Memory was assessed for emotional details contained in those narratives. Positive simulation resulted in a liberal response bias for positive information and a conservative bias for negative information. Events preceded by positive simulation were considered more favorably in retrospect. In contrast, negative simulation had no impact on subsequent memory. Results were similar across an immediate and delayed memory test and for past and future simulation. These results provide novel insights into the cognitive consequences of episodic future simulation and build on the optimism-bias literature by showing that adopting a favorable outlook results in a rosy memory.
人们在日常生活中经常进行未来思考,但目前尚不清楚提前模拟事件会如何改变该事件发生后的记忆方式。为了开始研究这一重要课题,我们进行了两项实验,参与者在通过叙述了解每个事件的假设结果之前,先对情绪事件进行模拟。对这些叙述中包含的情绪细节进行了记忆评估。积极的模拟导致对积极信息的自由反应偏向,对消极信息的保守偏向。积极模拟所产生的事件在回顾时被认为更有利。相比之下,消极模拟对后续记忆没有影响。结果在即时和延迟记忆测试以及过去和未来模拟中均相似。这些结果为情景式未来模拟的认知后果提供了新的见解,并通过表明采取有利的观点会导致美好回忆,扩展了乐观偏见文献。