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- Self-referential_encoding abstract "Every day, people are presented with endless amounts of information, and in an effort to help keep track and organize this information, people must be able to recognize, differentiate and store information. One way to do that is to organize information as it pertains to the self. The overall concept of self-reference suggests that people interpret incoming information in relation to themselves, using their self-concept as a background for new information. Examples include being able to attribute personality traits to oneself or to identify recollected episodes as being personal memories of the past. The implications of self-referential processing are evident in many psychological phenomena. For example, the "cocktail party effect" notes that people attend to the sound of their names even during other conversation or more prominent, distracting noise. Also, people tend to evaluate things related to themselves more positively (This is thought to be an aspect of implicit self-esteem). For example, people tend to prefer their own initials over other letters. The self-reference effect (SRE) has received the most attention through investigations into memory. The concepts of self-referential encoding and the SRE rely on the notion that relating information to the self during the process of encoding it in memory facilitates recall, hence the effect of self-reference on memory. In essence, researchers have investigated the potential mnemonic properties of self-reference. Research includes investigations into self-schema, self-concept and self-awareness as providing the foundation for self-reference's role in memory. Multiple explanations for the self-reference effect in memory exist, leading to a debate about the underlying processes involved in the self-reference effect. In addition, through the exploration of the self-reference effect, other psychological concepts have been discovered or supported, including simulation theory and the group reference effect. Finally, after researchers developed a concrete understanding of the self-reference effect, many expanded their investigations to consider the self-reference effect in particular groups like those with autism spectrum disorders or those experiencing depression.".
- Self-referential_encoding wikiPageID "4106285".
- Self-referential_encoding wikiPageRevisionID "596799864".
- Self-referential_encoding hasPhotoCollection Self-referential_encoding.
- Self-referential_encoding subject Category:Conceptions_of_self.
- Self-referential_encoding subject Category:Memory_biases.
- Self-referential_encoding subject Category:Self-reference.
- Self-referential_encoding type Abstraction100002137.
- Self-referential_encoding type Attitude106193203.
- Self-referential_encoding type Bias106201908.
- Self-referential_encoding type Cognition100023271.
- Self-referential_encoding type Concept105835747.
- Self-referential_encoding type ConceptionsOfSelf.
- Self-referential_encoding type Content105809192.
- Self-referential_encoding type Idea105833840.
- Self-referential_encoding type Inclination106196584.
- Self-referential_encoding type MemoryBiases.
- Self-referential_encoding type Partiality106201136.
- Self-referential_encoding type PsychologicalFeature100023100.
- Self-referential_encoding comment "Every day, people are presented with endless amounts of information, and in an effort to help keep track and organize this information, people must be able to recognize, differentiate and store information. One way to do that is to organize information as it pertains to the self. The overall concept of self-reference suggests that people interpret incoming information in relation to themselves, using their self-concept as a background for new information.".
- Self-referential_encoding label "Self-referential encoding".
- Self-referential_encoding sameAs m.0bjdrz.
- Self-referential_encoding sameAs Q7448193.
- Self-referential_encoding sameAs Q7448193.
- Self-referential_encoding sameAs Self-referential_encoding.
- Self-referential_encoding wasDerivedFrom Self-referential_encoding?oldid=596799864.
- Self-referential_encoding isPrimaryTopicOf Self-referential_encoding.