Investigating the Role of Imagery Vividness in the Experience of Involuntary Memories of Previously-Imagined Positive Scenarios
Investigating the Role of Imagery Vividness in the Experience of Involuntary Memories of Previously-Imagined Positive ScenariosInvoluntary memories are common in daily life and thought to play important functional roles, for example in prompting behaviour. People can experience involuntary memories not only of events they have actually experienced, but also of scenarios they have only imagined. However, this latter phenomenon, and the factors influencing its occurrence, are relatively unexplored. The current study aimed to investigate whether the vividness of an imagined scenario affects the likelihood of involuntary recall.https://www.psych.uni-goettingen.de/de/trace/publications-folder/investigating-the-role-of-imagery-vividness-in-the-experience-of-involuntary-memories-of-previously-imagined-positive-scenarios-1https://www.psych.uni-goettingen.de/@@site-logo/university-of-goettingen-logo.svg
Mahdi Bagheri, Marcella L Woud, Anna-Lena Feller, Janine Laudi, Gabriel D Kirchner, Henriette Schneider, Jürgen Margraf and Simon E Blackwell
Investigating the Role of Imagery Vividness in the Experience of Involuntary Memories of Previously-Imagined Positive Scenarios
Cognitive Therapy and Research
Involuntary memories are common in daily life and thought to play important functional roles, for example in prompting behaviour. People can experience involuntary memories not only of events they have actually experienced, but also of scenarios they have only imagined. However, this latter phenomenon, and the factors influencing its occurrence, are relatively unexplored. The current study aimed to investigate whether the vividness of an imagined scenario affects the likelihood of involuntary recall.