A distant mirror: Memories of parents and friends across childhood and adolescence

Authors: Carole Peterson, Alice Bonechi, Andrea Smorti and Franca Tani

Source: British Journal of Psychology

Publisher: British Psychological Society

Abstract:

Memories that were easily accessible (i.e. quickly retrieved in a memory-fluency task) of Italian university students were assessed. They were from four periods of life: preschool, elementary school, middle school, and high school/university. Half of the participants were instructed to recall only memories involving parents, and the other half memories involving friends. Across age at the time of remembered events, only memories of friends increased in frequency. For parental memories (but not friend memories), the proportion with negative affect increased over age, especially for males. There were also differences related to whether memories were episodic or generic. It was concluded that memories of different periods of childhood and adolescence can serve as a reflective mirror for developmental changes in parent–child and friendship relationships.

Document Type:

DOI: 10.1348/000712609X478835

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