Mine for life: Charting ownership effects in memory from adolescence to old age

Author:

Clarkson Tessa R1ORCID,Paff Harrison A1ORCID,Cunningham Sheila J2ORCID,Ross Josephine3,Haslam Catherine1,Kritikos Ada1

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychology, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, QLD, Australia

2. School of Applied Sciences, Abertay University, Dundee, UK

3. School of Humanities, Social Sciences and Law, University of Dundee, Dundee, UK

Abstract

This study investigates the self-reference effect (SRE) with an ownership memory task across several age groups, providing the first age exploration of implicit ownership memory biases from adolescence to older adulthood ( N = 159). Using a well-established ownership task, participants were required to sort images of grocery items as belonging to themselves or to a fictitious unnamed Other. After sorting and a brief distractor task, participants completed a surprise one-step source memory test. Overall, there was a robust SRE, with greater source memory accuracy for self-owned items. The SRE attenuated with age, such that the magnitude of difference between self and other memory diminished into older adulthood. Importantly, these findings were not due to a deterioration of memory for self-owned items, but rather an increase in memory performance for other-owned items. Linear mixed effects analyses showed self-biases in reaction times, such that self-owned items were identified more rapidly compared with other owned items. Again, age interacted with this effect showing that the responses of older adults were slowed, especially for other-owned items. Several theoretical implications were drawn from these findings, but we suggest that older adults may not experience ownership-related biases to the same degree as younger adults. Consequently, SREs through the lens of mere ownership may attenuate with age.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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