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Abstract

Volume 115 • Number 1

Spring 2002



 


A naturalistic study of autobiographical memories evoked by olfactory and visual cues: Testing the Proustian hypothesis

RACHEL S. HERZ
Brown University

JONATHAN W. SCHOOLER
University of Pittsburgh


The emotional and evocative qualities of autobiographical memories evoked by odors and visual cues were compared using a new repeated-measures paradigm in which the sensory cue was presented after the memory had been retrieved by its verbal label. Memory cues were chosen to be able to elicit salient memories. Results revealed that memories recalled in the context of odors were signi€cantly more emotional than those recalled in the context of the same cue presented visually and by the verbal label for the cue. Odor-evoked memories also tended to make participants feel more "brought back" to the original event. This work is the €rst unequivocal demonstration that naturalistic memories evoked by odors are more emotional than memories evoked by other cues.


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ISSN: 1939-8298