What can directed forgetting tell us about clinical populations?

This paper reviews and critically assesses the implications of directed forgetting (DF) research on clinical populations. We begin by reviewing the typical methods and results of the item method and list method directed forgetting procedures and provide best practice recommendations for future studi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical psychology review 2020-12, Vol.82, p.101926-101926, Article 101926
Hauptverfasser: Delaney, Peter F., Barden, Eileen P., Smith, Wyatt G., Wisco, Blair E.
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Barden, Eileen P.
Smith, Wyatt G.
Wisco, Blair E.
description This paper reviews and critically assesses the implications of directed forgetting (DF) research on clinical populations. We begin by reviewing the typical methods and results of the item method and list method directed forgetting procedures and provide best practice recommendations for future studies using clinical populations. Next, we note that DF was often interpreted as being due to inhibition, and when clinical populations showed impaired directed forgetting, it was treated as evidence in inhibitory control difficulties. However, inhibition may not be the cause of DF effects, based on current understanding of these cognitive tasks. We instead suggest that item method DF is tied to attentional control, which might include inhibitory mechanisms (or might not). In contrast, list method DF is tied to two forms of memory control: control of mental context (indicated by effective forgetting of List 1), and changes in the strategies used to remember (indicated by better learning of List 2). We review the current state of the clinical DF literature, assess its strength based on our best practice recommendations, and call for more research when warranted. •Directed forgetting (DF) is often used to study cognitive effects of disorders.•Item-method DF (cue after each item) involves attention control.•List-method DF (cue after each list) likely involves mental context, not inhibition.•Many clinically-oriented studies would benefit from updated contemporary designs.•Some disorders show clear patterns while others need more research.
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subjects Attention
Directed forgetting
Inhibition
Intentional forgetting
Memory
Psychopathology
Temporal context
title What can directed forgetting tell us about clinical populations?
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