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Original Articles

“The people I grew up with”: The role of sociodemographic factors in early memories in an Italian sample

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Pages 189-197 | Received 16 Oct 2011, Accepted 14 Dec 2011, Published online: 07 Feb 2012
 

Abstract

This within-culture study aimed to investigate the age and density of earliest memories in a sample of Italian young adults. The framework of this study is sociocultural, with an emphasis on family reminiscing as contributing to early memories. In this regard Italy is of interest due to the fact that it is a Western but familial oriented culture, where multi-generational family ties are still strong in comparison with other European counterparts, providing for the opportunity to investigate the offset of childhood amnesia as a function of growing up in an extended family structure. Consistent with Mullen (1994), 90 undergraduate students were interviewed about their earliest memory and about sociodemographic factors in their early childhood years: household composition, gender, birth order, presence of family moves, and significant early childhood experiences. Participants who grew up in an extended family situation reported earlier and denser memories in comparison with those from nuclear families. Results are discussed in light of other cross-cultural work on childhood amnesia and with respect to sociocultural theories of the importance of family reminiscing for one's early memories.

Acknowledgments

We would like to acknowledge all the students who took part in the experiment, and Fiona Jack and Harlene Hayne for their advice.

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