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The self-reference effect is a tendency for people to encode information differently depending on the level on which the self is implicated in the information.
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"Material encoded with reference to the self is better remembered. One interpretation of this effect is that the self operates to organise retrieval of memories.
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11 Oct 2010 ... Existing demonstrations of the self-reference effect rely on laboratory stimuli and use explicit cues to prompt self-relevant encoding. In three ...
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The self-reference effect is the tendency for individuals to have better memory for information that relates to oneself in comparison to material that has less ...
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10 Oct 2010 ... Self-Reference Effect is the tendency for people to remember information better if it is relevant to them. This is a powerful encoding strategy, ...
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1 Jan 1997 ... A meta-analysis confirms the expected self-reference effect (SRE) in memory, with self-referent encoding strategies yielding superior memory ...
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A meta-analysis confirms the expected self-reference effect (SRE) in memory, with self-referent encoding strategies yielding superior memory relative to both ...
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8 Jul 2011 ... The self-reference effect (SRE), by which encoding of information is done in a self -referential manner (e.g., “Does the word describe you?
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The self-reference effect has been traced to theories of the self structure in memory. The self is thought to represent an elaborate and organized network of ...
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The present study investigates potential age differences in the self-reference effect. Young and older adults incidentally encoded adjectives by deciding whether ...
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