Abstract
An integral feature of human memory is the ability to recall past events. What distinguishes such episodic memory from associative and semantic memories is the joint encoding and retrieval of “what,” “where,” and “when” (WWW) of events. Here, we investigated whether the WWW components of episodes are retrieved with equal fidelity. Using a novel task where human participants were probed on the WWW components of a recently-viewed synthetic movie, we found fundamental differences in mnemonic accuracy between these components. The memory of “when” had the lowest accuracy and was most severely influenced by primacy and recency. Further, the memory of “when” and “where” were most susceptible to interference due to changes in memory load. These findings suggest that episodes are not stored and retrieved as a coherent whole. Rather, memory components preserve a degree of independence, suggesting that remembering coherent episodes is an active reconstruction process.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory