2017
DOI: 10.1017/s0140525x17000012
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Why do we remember? The communicative function of episodic memory

Abstract: Short Abstract-We propose a novel account of episodic memory function based on a conceptual and empirical analysis of its role in belief formation. We provide a critique of the view that episodic memory serves future-directed imagination, and argue that the central features of this capacity can instead be explained by the role it plays in human communication. On this view, episodic memory allows us to communicatively support our interpretations of the past by gauging when we can assert epistemic authority. Thi… Show more

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Cited by 233 publications
(181 citation statements)
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References 481 publications
(642 reference statements)
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“…having lived through the defining event. Maintaining a sense of subjective self-continuity is 10 posited to serve important social functions, with the painting of a detailed picture of a 11 previously experienced event to another person thought to promote bonding, trust, and empathy 12 (Mahr and Csibra, 2017). It is surprising, then, that social comportments and interactions 13 remain generally preserved in AD, at least in the early stages (Zhang et al, 2015), in the face 14 of starkly impaired subjective self-continuity for the past.…”
Section: Alzheimer's Disease (Ad) 28mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…having lived through the defining event. Maintaining a sense of subjective self-continuity is 10 posited to serve important social functions, with the painting of a detailed picture of a 11 previously experienced event to another person thought to promote bonding, trust, and empathy 12 (Mahr and Csibra, 2017). It is surprising, then, that social comportments and interactions 13 remain generally preserved in AD, at least in the early stages (Zhang et al, 2015), in the face 14 of starkly impaired subjective self-continuity for the past.…”
Section: Alzheimer's Disease (Ad) 28mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Corballis and Suddendorf argue that language may have evolved, at least in part, because it enables the sharing of mental time travels into the past and future (Corballis and Suddendorf 2007). Consider the long-recognized connections between imagination, MTT and storytelling (McBride 2012;Abraham 2016;Boyer and Parren 2015;Mahr and Csibra 2017). With simulations of the future come insights about what it might hold.…”
Section: Prospection Invention Culture and Creativitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although our senses are subjected to a continuous flow of information, memories of the past are retrieved as discrete episodes of perceptual and spatiotemporal information. That is, episodic memories consist of the "what," "where," and "when" elements of events (Mahr & Csibra, 2018;Tulving, 2002). During episodic memory formation, these elements are bound in an associative conjugative process, such that each element may form a retrieval cue for the entire memory.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%