|
Second-person episodic memory: Rethinking interpersonal dimensions of remembering| title | Second-person episodic memory: Rethinking interpersonal dimensions of remembering |
|---|
| start_date | 2025/01/09 |
|---|
| schedule | 12h15-13h45 |
|---|
| online | no |
|---|
| location_info | on Zoom |
|---|
| summary | Autobiographical memory can be understood as a systematic organization of events in the world from the perspective of "what happens to me." However, not all these events converge equally on the dimensionless point called "me." This is because many experiences involve interactions with those around me—through active, passive, or joint actions—where second-person others inevitably come into play. Moreover, the second-person perspective remains crucial during remembering. Since episodic memory is deeply tied to narrative construction, its source evaluation tends to encompass not only cognitive but also affective rapport with others. Someone affectively reliable, who remembers what I cannot retrieve alone, might contribute not only to my episodic memory but also recursively enhance their own affective reliability as a trusted other. Thus, "my" episodic remembering, to some degree, involves the second-person other’s episodic remembering. This presentation aims to reexamine these aspects of second-person episodic memory in the broader contexts of first-person–focused episodic memory, semantic memory, and collective memory, illuminating their unique characteristics and theoretical implications. |
|---|
| responsibles | Kourken, Andonovski |
|---|
Workflow history| from state (1) | to state | comment | date |
| submitted | published | | 2025/01/06 12:58 UTC |
| |
|