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Original Articles

Temporal distribution of favourite books, movies, and records: Differential encoding and re-sampling

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Pages 755-767 | Received 01 Aug 2006, Published online: 08 Oct 2007

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

Read on this site (17)

Paolo Paolantonio, Carla Pedrazzani, Stefano Cavalli & Aaron Williamon. (2022) Music in the life of nursing home residents. Arts & Health 14:3, pages 309-325.
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Michael D. Reiter. (2019) Theme Song for Change: Utilizing Music to Enhance Client Resources. Journal of Family Psychotherapy 30:1, pages 40-59.
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SteveM. J. Janssen, David C. Rubin & Martin A. Conway. (2012) The reminiscence bump in the temporal distribution of the best football players of all time: Pelé, Cruijff or Maradona?. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 65:1, pages 165-178.
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DavidE. Copeland, GabrielA. Radvansky & KerriA. Goodwin. (2009) A novel study: Forgetting curves and the reminiscence bump. Memory 17:3, pages 323-336.
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SteveM. J. Janssen & JaapM. J. Murre. (2008) Reminiscence bump in autobiographical memory: Unexplained by novelty, emotionality, valence, or importance of personal events. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 61:12, pages 1847-1860.
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Articles from other publishers (50)

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James Renwick & Matthew H. Woolhouse. (2023) Reminiscence bump invariance with respect to genre, age, and country. Psychology of Music 51:4, pages 1349-1365.
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Anne Siebrasse & Melanie Wald-Fuhrmann. (2023) You don’t know a person(’s taste) when you only know which genre they like: taste differences within five popular music genres based on sub-genres and sub-styles. Frontiers in Psychology 14.
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Alexander P. Kaiser & Dorthe Berntsen. (2022) The cognitive characteristics of music‐evoked autobiographical memories: Evidence from a systematic review of clinical investigations. WIREs Cognitive Science 14:3.
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Krystian Barzykowski, Ewa Skopicz-Radkiewicz, Radosław Kabut, Søren Risløv Staugaard & Giuliana Mazzoni. (2021) Intention and Monitoring Influence the Content of Memory Reports. Psychological Reports 126:2, pages 918-945.
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Steve M. J. Janssen. 2023. The Palgrave Encyclopedia of Memory Studies. The Palgrave Encyclopedia of Memory Studies 1 6 .
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Yulia Panteleeva, Delphine S Courvoisier, Donald Glowinski, Didier M Grandjean & Grazia Ceschi. (2021) Effects of emotionally incongruent musical excerpts on memory retrieval. Psychology of Music 50:3, pages 945-959.
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Lauren Istvandity. (2019) The lifetime soundtrack ‘on the move’: Music, autobiographical memory and mobilities. Memory Studies 15:1, pages 170-183.
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Kelly Jakubowski, Amy M. Belfi & Tuomas Eerola. (2021) Phenomenological Differences in Music- and Television-Evoked Autobiographical Memories. Music Perception 38:5, pages 435-455.
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Emily Rose Hurwitz & Carol Lynne Krumhansl. (2021) Shifting Listening Niches: Effects of the COVID-19 Pandemic. Frontiers in Psychology 12.
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Rebecca Reh, Lynne J. Williams, Rebecca M. Todd & Lawrence M. Ward. (2021) Warped rhythms: Epileptic activity during critical periods disrupts the development of neural networks for human communication. Behavioural Brain Research 399, pages 113016.
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Amy M. Belfi & Kelly Jakubowski. (2021) Music and Autobiographical Memory. Music & Science 4, pages 205920432110471.
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Amy M. Belfi, Elena Bai & Ava Stroud. (2020) Comparing Methods for Analyzing Music-Evoked Autobiographical Memories. Music Perception 37:5, pages 392-402.
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Tabea Wolf & Daniel Zimprich. (2020) What characterizes the reminiscence bump in autobiographical memory? New answers to an old question. Memory & Cognition 48:4, pages 607-622.
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Steve M. J. Janssen. (2019) Introduction to the Cognitive Abilities Account for the Reminiscence Bump in the Temporal Distribution of Autobiographical Memory. Psychological Reports 123:1, pages 12-42.
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Alexandra Lamont & Catherine Loveday. (2020) A New Framework for Understanding Memories and Preference for Music. Music & Science 3, pages 205920432094831.
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Travis G. Cyr & William Hirst. (2019) Death keeps no calendar: The temporal distribution of autobiographical memories kept in death.. Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition 8:3, pages 319-336.
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Susanne Kristen-Antonow. (2017) The role of ToM in creating a reminiscence bump for MEAMs from adolescence. Psychology of Music 47:1, pages 51-68.
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Thorsten Hennig-Thurau & Mark B. HoustonThorsten Hennig-Thurau & Mark B. Houston. 2019. Entertainment Science. Entertainment Science 59 124 .
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Ali İ. Tekcan, Aysecan Boduroglu, Aysu Mutlutürk & Aslı Aktan Erciyes. (2017) Life-span retrieval of public events: Reminiscence bump for high-impact events, recency for others. Memory & Cognition 45:7, pages 1095-1112.
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Berivan Ece & Sami Gülgöz. (2017) Is the Road Still Bumpy Without the Most Frequent Life Events?. Applied Cognitive Psychology 31:3, pages 326-339.
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Carol Lynne Krumhansl. (2017) Listening Niches across a Century of Popular Music. Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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Clare J. Rathbone, Akira R. O’Connor & Chris J. A. Moulin. (2016) The tracks of my years: Personal significance contributes to the reminiscence bump. Memory & Cognition 45:1, pages 137-150.
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Daniel Zimprich & Tabea Wolf. (2015) The distribution of memories for popular songs in old age: An individual differences approach. Psychology of Music 44:4, pages 640-657.
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Ilyoung Ju, Yunmi Choi, Jon Morris, Hsiao-Wen Liao & Susan Bluck. (2016) Creating Nostalgic Advertising Based on the Reminiscence Bump: Diachronic Relevance and Purchase Intent. Applied Cognitive Psychology 30:3, pages 465-471.
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Friedrich Platz, Reinhard Kopiez, Johannes Hasselhorn & Anna Wolf. (2015) The impact of song-specific age and affective qualities of popular songs on music-evoked autobiographical memories (MEAMs). Musicae Scientiae 19:4, pages 327-349.
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Martinette Kruger & Melville Saayman. (2015) Consumer preferences of Generation Y. Journal of Vacation Marketing 21:4, pages 366-382.
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Delia Fuhrmann, Lisa J. Knoll & Sarah-Jayne Blakemore. (2015) Adolescence as a Sensitive Period of Brain Development. Trends in Cognitive Sciences 19:10, pages 558-566.
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Xanat Vargas Meza & Han Woo Park. (2014) Globalization of cultural products: a webometric analysis of Kpop in Spanish-speaking countries. Quality & Quantity 49:4, pages 1345-1360.
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Steve M. J. Janssen. (2015) Commentary on Koppel and Berntsen: How many reminiscence bumps are there?. Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition 4:1, pages 81-83.
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Mirva Peltoniemi. (2015) Cultural Industries: Product-Market Characteristics, Management Challenges and Industry Dynamics. International Journal of Management Reviews 17:1, pages 41-68.
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Aude Martenot & Stefano Cavalli. (2014) Histoire et parcours de vie : la perception des changements sociohistoriquesHistory and life course : the perception of socio-historical changesHistoria y trascurso de vida : la percepción de los cambios socio-históricos. Temporalités:20.
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Berivan Ece & Sami Gülgöz. (2014) The Impact of Suppressing the Typical Life Events on the Reminiscence Bump. Applied Cognitive Psychology 28:5, pages 702-710.
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Howard Schuman & Amy Corning. (2013) Collective memory and autobiographical memory: Similar but not the same. Memory Studies 7:2, pages 146-160.
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Jonathan Koppel. (2012) The Reminiscence Bump for Public Events: A Review of Its Prevalence and Taxonomy of Alternative Age Distributions. Applied Cognitive Psychology 27:1, pages 12-32.
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Peter J. Rentfrow. (2012) The Role of Music in Everyday Life: Current Directions in the Social Psychology of Music. Social and Personality Psychology Compass 6:5, pages 402-416.
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Tom F.M. Ter BogtJuul MulderQuinten A.W. RaaijmakersSaoirse Nic Gabhainn. (2010) Moved by music: A typology of music listeners. Psychology of Music 39:2, pages 147-163.
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Steve M. J. Janssen & David C. Rubin. (2011) Age effects in cultural life scripts. Applied Cognitive Psychology 25:2, pages 291-298.
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Steve M. J. Janssen, David C. Rubin & Peggy L. St. Jacques. (2010) The temporal distribution of autobiographical memory: changes in reliving and vividness over the life span do not explain the reminiscence bump. Memory & Cognition 39:1, pages 1-11.
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William J. Friedman & Steve M.J. Janssen. (2010) Aging and the speed of time. Acta Psychologica 134:2, pages 130-141.
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