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APPLIED COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY Appl. Cognit. Psychol. (2010) Published online in Wiley InterScience (www.interscience.wiley.com) DOI: 10.1002/acp.1657 When’s Your Birthday? The Self-reference Effect in Retrieval of Dates CLARE J. RATHBONE* and CHRIS J. A. MOULIN Leeds Memory Group, Institute of Psychological Sciences, University of Leeds, UK SUMMARY 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. We were motivated to find out whether this organisational principle extended to everyday information and for material not explicitly related to the self. Participants generated friends’ birthdays from memory and then gave their own birthday. We found that participants were particularly likely to recall birthdays from on or around the date of their own birthday. Thus, memory for birthdays clusters around self-relevant information, even when there is no specific attempt to recall self-related material. Birthdays clustered somewhat around the time of testing, important dates in the calendar, and for a close other, but not to the extent of the participants’ birthdays. We suggest this is a demonstration of the organisational structure of the self in memory. Copyright # 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. The self-reference effect (SRE; Rogers, Kuiper, & Kirker, 1977) refers to the robust phenomenon that things encoded with reference to the self are generally remembered better. For example, words that are rated for how much they describe one’s self are later better recalled than words rated as descriptions of another person (e.g. Symons & Johnson, 1997). This finding supports theories that view the self as a mechanism through which memories are organised, stored and retrieved (e.g. Conway & Pleydell-Pearce, 2000), and emphasises the rich and highly elaborated structure of the self as a schema in long-term memory. The mechanisms behind the SRE are thought to be related to the encoding specificity hypothesis (Tulving & Thompson, 1973), which states that memory performance is improved when encoding conditions match retrieval demands. Symons and Johnson (1997) suggest that self-referential processing might have such a powerful effect on memory as the self is a well-developed cognitive structure that promotes the organisation and elaboration of knowledge, thus promoting compatible retrieval and encoding conditions. It has previously been suggested that the SRE does not necessarily reflect a unique or special effect of the self. For example, Klein and Kihlstrom (1986) found that preferential retrieval in the self-reference condition could be explained by a process of elaborate encoding, and suggested that any task in which items are encoded with reference to a highly elaborate and organised structure (such as, but not limited to, the self) will improve recall. *Correspondence to: Clare J. Rathbone, Leeds Memory Group, Institute of Psychological Sciences, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, UK. E-mail: [email protected] Copyright # 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. C. J. Rathbone and C. J. A. Moulin In line with this proposal, Bower and Gilligan (1979) found an SRE when both self and mother were used as the referent. Bower and Gilligan proposed that encoding with reference to the non-self-schemata of any well-known person will produce preferential retrieval, and that the SRE is a product of depth of processing, rather than necessarily an effect of reference to the self. Gillihan and Farah (2005) suggested that many studies that seek to examine whether self-processing is unique are flawed by differences between task demands in self and other conditions. Such confounds make it hard to extrapolate the potential uniqueness of self as a cognitive structure. The present study avoids such problems by employing a straightforward recall task that is not explicitly related to the self. The self is also suggested to play an organisational role in the temporal distributions of memories. Many researchers have investigated the strategies people use to date events, and the temporal associations that might link memories (e.g. Betz & Skowronski, 1997; Brown, 1990; Linton, 1986; Thompson, Skowronski, Larsen, & Betz, 1996). A prominent field of research that focuses on the temporal distribution of memories deals with the reminiscence bump: The phenomenon that adults tend to recall memories best from the period of late adolescence and early adulthood (e.g. Glück & Bluck, 2007; Jansari & Parkin, 1996; Rubin, Rahhal, & Poon, 1998; Rubin, Wetzler, & Nebes, 1986). This robust effect has been demonstrated using a variety of methodological approaches (although the exact location of the bump varies depending on method, see Rubin & Schulkind, 1997), and cross-cultural investigations indicate it to be a universal phenomenon (e.g. Conway, Wang, Hanyu, & Haque, 2005). The reminiscence bump has been found for public new events (Holmes & Conway, 1999), age of encountering favourite films (Sehulster, 1996), books (Larsen, 1996) and songs (Holbrook & Schindler, 1989). Furthermore, reminiscence bumps have been found for both episodic and semantic memories (e.g. Rybash & Monaghan, 1999). There are several different theories behind the reminiscence bump, including cognitive, biological and identity-based accounts (for a review, see Rubin et al., 1998). Identity-based accounts suggest that the reminiscence bump is linked to the development of a stable, coherent self (e.g. Cappeliez, 2008; Conway & Haque, 1999; Conway & Holmes, 2004), a process that is thought to occur during this period in the lifespan (Erikson, 1950; Fitzgerald, 1988). In support of accounts that view the self as central to reminiscence bump formation, research has also shown that memories across the lifespan cluster around times relevant to the self. For example, Rathbone, Moulin, and Conway (2008) found that self-images (such as ‘I am a mother’) were linked with sets of highly accessible episodic memories from the time that self-image was judged to emerge. In effect, this finding reflects a SRE in the longterm encoding and retrieval of memories. Times of central importance for the self are associated with heightened retrieval. The current study used a novel approach, bridging research on the standard SRE (typically assessed using word-list methodologies; for a review see Symons & Johnson, 1997) and the reminiscence bump literature on the centrality of self in encoding and retrieval (e.g. Conway, 2005). If the self plays an executive role in long-term memory organisation, then we would expect retrieval of friends’ birthday dates to show a clustering effect: We would better remember birthdays matching, or close to, our own. Other research has considered birthday distributions; the Birthdays Paradox refers to the counter-intuitive finding that there is a 50% probability for any two people in a group of 23 sharing a birthday (e.g. McKinney, 1966). The present study focuses not on the probability that any two people will share the same birthday, but on the probability that birthdays recalled by a person will match, or be close to, their own birthday. The probability of one birthday matching any specified birthday is in fact much lower than the McKinney value. The aim of Copyright # 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Appl. Cognit. Psychol. (2010) DOI: 10.1002/acp Self-reference effect for dates this study was to investigate the distribution of recalled birthday dates around date of own birthday. If the self acts as an elaborative schema through which memories for dates are organised, we would predict a peak in retrieval for dates close to the date of one’s own birthday. METHOD There were 2455 participants (mean age ¼ 23.6, SD ¼ 8.86; mode ¼ 19; median ¼ 22, range ¼ 12–95), who completed an online questionnaire (a further 636 participants submitted questionnaires that were too incomplete for use, e.g. no birthdays recalled). The questionnaire asked for as many birthday dates (day and month) as could be recalled, up to a maximum of 24. The questionnaire was active from 18 December 2007 to 18 February 2009, and was linked from several psychology survey websites associated with both American and Swiss universities.1 Students at the University of Leeds (UK) also completed the questionnaire for course credits, thus our sample was likely a cross section of different western nationalities. No data on nationality, IP address, or completion time was recorded. Participants were instructed to provide dates for friends and not family members, and to avoid guessing. Participants were also asked to rate their closeness to each friend by ranking them as 1 (not close), 2 (quite close) or 3 (very close). At the end of the questionnaire, participants gave their own date of birth. All friends’ birthday dates were entered on the same screen, however there was a separate final screen for entry of the participant’s own birthday. RESULTS Participants recalled a total of 21 721 birthdays, generating dates for a mean of 8.83 friends (SD ¼ 6.09; range ¼ 1–24). Participants’ own birthdays were distributed equally across the year (Figure 1). This was analysed statistically by calculating the number of birthdays that fell into each calendar month and comparing this with the expected number per month (total birthdays divided by 12 ¼ 205) in a one sample t-test (t ¼ ".9, df ¼ 11, p ¼ .93). The mean count of birthdays recalled across the year by day was 59.5 (SD ¼ 14.6). To analyse whether clustering occurred for retrieval of birthdays around date of own birthday, friends’ birthdays were recoded as number of days from the participant’s own birthday. As shown in Figure 2 (upper left panel) they clustered around day zero (the participant’s birthday). To analyse we generated an even distribution, reflecting the null hypothesis based on equal distribution of birthdays across all dates (i.e. the mean number of birthdays and the SD of dates as recoded around birthday ¼ 26.5). It was then possible to examine the observed count with reference to this mean and standard deviation as a z-score. The distribution around own birthday demonstrates a significant peak at 0 (own birthday) of 429 counts compared to the expected frequency of 59.5 (z ¼ 13.94). This pattern suggests that memory for birthdays is temporally organised with reference to the self, much like episodic memories (Rathbone et al., 2008). 1 Thanks to the websites which added a link for the Birthdays Study: http://www.socialpsychology.org/expts.htm, http://genpsylab-wexlist.unizh.ch/, http://psych.hanover.edu/research/exponnet.html. Copyright # 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Appl. Cognit. Psychol. (2010) DOI: 10.1002/acp C. J. Rathbone and C. J. A. Moulin Figure 1. Distribution of participants’ own birthdays across the year Figure 2. Distribution of recalled birthdays around date of own birthday as zero (upper left panel), around date of test as zero (upper right panel), across the year around Christmas day as zero (lower left panel: a ¼ 4 July, b ¼ 11 September, c ¼ Halloween, d ¼ Christmas day, e ¼ New Year’s Eve and New Year’s day, f ¼ Valentine’s day, g ¼ April Fool’s day) and around a close friend’s birthday as zero (lower right panel) Copyright # 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Appl. Cognit. Psychol. (2010) DOI: 10.1002/acp Self-reference effect for dates To investigate whether other salient events cause a similar clustering of dates, all recalled birthdays were recoded as the number of days from the date of test (as day zero). Figure 2 (upper right panel) shows that there is some clustering using this method (with the most remembered birthdays falling on the day before the test session), but this is a less pronounced peak than using participants’ own birthdays (test date distribution SD ¼ 13.19; z ¼ 6.49). In addition, we were interested in the possible effects of salient public events and national holidays on retrieval. Thus, all the dates were recoded around Christmas day as an arbitrary zero point (lower left panel) to investigate whether any salient calendar event causes clustering. Distribution peaks occur on public holidays and dates of memorable events (e.g. September the 11th), suggesting that salient dates are used to organise and retrieve birthdays. The seven public events associated with heightened retrieval are labelled on Figure 2. The z-scores related to each public event are: 4 July (z ¼ 2.85), 11 September (z ¼ 4.35), Halloween (z ¼ 4.42), Christmas day (z ¼ 4.56), New Year’s Eve (z ¼ 3.33), New Year’s day (z ¼ 4.63), Valentine’s day (z ¼ 5.52), and April Fool’s day (z ¼ 4.49). We suggest that self cues are most powerful; participants are three times more likely to recall a friend’s birthday if it falls on their own birthday than if it falls on Christmas day, for example. As most SRE studies employ an ‘other’ condition (e.g. Symons & Johnson, 1997) to compare with self-referent retrieval, we included a similar analysis in the present study. To generate an ‘other’ condition, we used a birthday of someone the participant generated. We reasoned that the first birthday generated might be a salient other, and we were able to establish this by using the closeness ratings generated for each friend. Thus, each participant’s first-recalled friend (only using cases where this friend was ranked as being ‘very close’ to the participant) was used as a further clustering date. This produced a sample of 1729 dates (mean count of birthdays ¼ 39.03; SD ¼ 7.29). These birthdates were then used as day zero, with all following birthdays given by each participant recoded as the number of days before or after this date. Results (shown in Figure 2, lower right panel), demonstrate that the birthday of a close friend (e.g. close ’other’) has some effect on enhancing retrieval (z ¼ 7.12), but not to the extent that the self does. CONCLUSIONS The present study shows that birthdays are best recalled if they are close to the date of one’s own birthday. The method for collecting these birthday dates was very simple, and, crucially, involved no explicit reference to the self. In this respect this paper presents a pure demonstration of the powerful effect of the self in retrieval. The effect of the self produces a more clustered distribution of recalled dates than when other standard comparison points are used (e.g. a close ‘other’, date of test, and salient public events such as Christmas, 11 September and Halloween). These findings support theories of the reminiscence bump that relate the heightened retrieval of events from young adulthood to the importance of this time for identityformation (e.g. Conway & Haque, 1999). This study demonstrates a SRE in long-term memory organisation, and supports the view that the self plays a central role in memory encoding and retrieval (e.g. Conway, 2005). Results also suggest that the self acts as a uniquely elaborate construct, as it exerts a more powerful effect on recall than a close other or salient calendar events. A common critique of the SRE is that it does not necessarily indicate the uniqueness of self-referential processing (e.g. Symons & Johnson, 1997). This Copyright # 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Appl. Cognit. Psychol. (2010) DOI: 10.1002/acp C. J. Rathbone and C. J. A. Moulin proposal is supported by evidence that encoding with reference to other highly elaborate and organised structures enhances retrieval to a similar extent (e.g. Gillihan & Farah, 2005; Klein & Kihlstrom, 1986). The present study uses a different approach, by examining the implicit retrieval of self-referenced information. As there are no explicit self-encoding versus other-encoding conditions (and participants were unaware that they would be asked for their own birthday), we suggest that this task reflects free recall of un-primed information. Results indicate that the self organises retrieval in a more pronounced way than a close other or salient calendar events. Thus, although this study does not employ a standard SRE paradigm, results suggest that there is a unique effect of the self in retrieval. 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