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Original Articles

Remembering pride and shame: Self-enhancement and the phenomenology of autobiographical memory

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Pages 538-547 | Received 04 Oct 2007, Published online: 28 May 2008
 

Abstract

People's self-images are grounded in autobiographical memories and, in particular, in the phenomenological experience associated with remembering. The desire to increase or maintain the positivity of the self-image (i.e., the self-enhancement motive) might thus play an important role in shaping memory phenomenology. This study examined this hypothesis by asking participants to recall positive and negative events that involve self-evaluations (i.e., pride and shame) and positive and negative events that involve evaluations about others (i.e., admiration and contempt); various phenomenological characteristics (e.g., sensory details, feeling of re-experiencing) were assessed using rating scales. The results show a positivity bias (i.e., subjectively remembering positive events with more details than negative events) for events that involve self-evaluations but not for events that involve evaluations of others. In addition, this bias was stronger for people high in self-esteem. It is concluded that biases affecting the phenomenology of autobiographical memory are part of the arsenal of psychological mechanisms people use to maintain a positive self-image.

Acknowledgements

This research was supported by a grant from the French-speaking community of Belgium (ARC, Convention 06/11-340). Arnaud D'Argembeau is supported by the Belgian Fund for Scientific Research (FRS-FNRS)

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