A study has shown that self-imagination can be an effective strategy for helping us to recognize something we've seen before or retrieve specific information on cue.
A study has shown that self-imagination can be an effective strategy for helping us to recognize something we've seen before or retrieve specific information on cue. These beneficial effects have been demonstrated for both healthy adults and for individuals who suffer memory impairments as a result of brain injury.
These findings suggest that self-imagination is a promising strategy for memory rehabilitation.
But no study has investigated the effect of self-imagination on what is perhaps the most difficult, and most relevant, type of memory: free recall.
Psychological scientists Matthew Grilli and Elizabeth Glisky of the University of Arizona decided to put self-imagination to the test.
They wanted to compare self-imagination to more traditional strategies that involve sense of self in order to gain a better understanding of the underlying mechanisms that might be at work.
The researchers recruited 15 patients with acquired brain injury who had impaired memory and 15 healthy participants with normal memory to take part in the study.
Advertisement
For all participants, healthy and memory-impaired, self-imagination boosted free recall of the personality traits more than any of the other strategies did.
Advertisement
This result falls in line with previous findings that knowledge about specific events from the past is often impaired in patients with brain injury.
It also lends support to the researchers' hypothesis that the benefit of self-imagination for memory-impaired patients might be related to their ability to retrieve knowledge regarding their own personality traits, identity roles, and lifetime periods.
The researchers believe that their findings could have important applications for memory rehabilitation.
Self-imagination could also help clinicians in teaching memory-impaired individuals how to use memory aides that can enhance their independence.
The study is published in Clinical Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.
Source-ANI