“…Although such stimuli are useful for achieving experimental control and for understanding the core processes involved in the task, they do not address how people control retrieval of more complex, self-relevant, and emotional memories in everyday life. There is extant behavioural and neuroimaging literature on suppression of emotional words/picture memories (e.g., Chen et al, 2012; Depue et al, 2007; Gagnepain et al, 2017; Joormann et al, 2009; Legrand et al, 2020), but because of the lack of self-relevance of those materials, they arguably do not elicit strong motivation for memory control. Research using more complex stimuli suggests that people can suppress unpleasant self-relevant information (Benoit et al, 2016; Noreen et al, 2014) and autobiographical memories (Noreen et al, 2016; Noreen & Macleod, 2013; Stephens et al, 2013).…”