Institute of Psychology, University of Bern, Fabrikstr. 8, 3000, Bern, Switzerland.
Mem Cognit. 2021 Jan;49(1):83-89. doi: 10.3758/s13421-020-01076-8.
Collective memory is shared by a group and is part of that group's identity. Memory for political leaders is a prototypical case of collective memory. The present study investigated collective memory for Swiss federal councilors in order to test the trajectory of collective memory across four different generations (i.e., Millennials, Generation X, Baby-Boomers, and Silents) in a collaborative government system. In contrast to a presidential system, Switzerland is governed by seven equal councilors who share power and responsibilities. Thus, the individual member of the government is less important, and the number of councilors is larger compared to a presidential system, which may influence collective memory. The results revealed a recency effect as well as a generation-specific reminiscence effect, but no primacy effect as reported for presidential systems. These results indicate that the contribution of semantic memory and autobiographic memory to the trajectory of collective memory vary across government systems. Specifically, for a collaborative government system, autobiographic memory has a stronger contribution to the trajectory of collective memory.
集体记忆是由一个群体共享的,是该群体身份的一部分。对政治领导人的记忆是集体记忆的典型案例。本研究调查了瑞士联邦委员会成员的集体记忆,以检验在协作政府制度下,跨越四个不同世代(即千禧一代、X 世代、婴儿潮一代和沉默一代)的集体记忆轨迹。与总统制不同,瑞士由七位平等的委员会成员共同治理,他们共同分享权力和责任。因此,与总统制相比,政府的个别成员的重要性较低,而且委员会成员的数量也更多,这可能会影响集体记忆。研究结果显示了近因效应以及特定于世代的怀旧效应,但没有像总统制那样出现首因效应。这些结果表明,语义记忆和自传记忆对集体记忆轨迹的贡献因政府制度而异。具体来说,对于协作政府制度,自传记忆对集体记忆轨迹的贡献更大。