Infant memory for place information
- 1 July 1991
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Memory & Cognition
- Vol. 19 (4) , 378-386
- https://doi.org/10.3758/bf03197142
Abstract
The present studies were designed to examine the role of place cues in memory retrieval during early infancy. Three-month-old infants were trained to move a mobile by kicking. Two weeks later, memory retrieval was disrupted if they were reminded in a location or place different from where they had been trained, but not if they were reminded in the same place (Experiment 1A). The same result was obtained even though highly salient cues in their immediate visual surround remained unchanged during reminding (Experiments 1B and 1C). No disruption was seen, however, when retrieval was cued in a different place after only 1 day (Experiment 2). These findings unequivocally demonstrate that infants as young as 3 months encode incidental information about the place where an event occurs and suggest that early memories are buffered against retrieval in potentially inappropriate contexts over the long term.Keywords
This publication has 48 references indexed in Scilit:
- Contextual Constraints on Memory Retrieval at Six MonthsChild Development, 1990
- The effect of multiple reminders on long‐term retention in human infantsDevelopmental Psychobiology, 1990
- Contextual gating of memory retrievalDevelopmental Psychobiology, 1989
- Stimulus attributes of reactivated memory: Alleviation of ontogenetic forgetting in rats is context specificDevelopmental Psychobiology, 1988
- Attention gating in short-term visual memory.Psychological Review, 1986
- Changing environmental context does not reliably affect memoryMemory & Cognition, 1985
- Alteration of a Training Memory through CueingPublished by JSTOR ,1982
- Reactivation of Infant MemoryScience, 1980
- A Conditioning Analysis of Infant Long-Term MemoryChild Development, 1979
- Reinstatement.Psychological Review, 1966