Episodic and semantic memory in accounts of food intolerance

It was hypothesized that accounts of occasions of eating followed by adverse symptoms (i.e. perceived food intolerance) would contain greater detail when based on recall of actual events, using episodic memory. Where accounts lacked detail it was hypothesized that recalled events were based on knowl...

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Veröffentlicht in:Applied cognitive psychology 1999-10, Vol.13 (5), p.451-464
Hauptverfasser: Knibb, R. C., Booth, D. A., Platts, R., Armstrong, A., Booth, I. W., Macdonald, A.
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container_end_page 464
container_issue 5
container_start_page 451
container_title Applied cognitive psychology
container_volume 13
creator Knibb, R. C.
Booth, D. A.
Platts, R.
Armstrong, A.
Booth, I. W.
Macdonald, A.
description It was hypothesized that accounts of occasions of eating followed by adverse symptoms (i.e. perceived food intolerance) would contain greater detail when based on recall of actual events, using episodic memory. Where accounts lacked detail it was hypothesized that recalled events were based on knowledge about food intolerance, without personal experience of a plausible incident. These hypotheses were tested by categorizing the contents of interviews of respondents to a randomized survey of the electorate in the Birmingham area, who attributed one or more adverse symptoms to one or more foods. The majority of interview records provided evidence for semantic memory rather than recall of actual episodes of food ingestion followed by symptoms(s). Vagueness of recollection correlated negatively with patho‐physiological plausibility of the perceived food intolerance. Greater detail and specificity in accounts of food‐symptom episodes was positively correlated with plausibility. Rareness of food‐symptom(s) contingencies also correlated with detail and specificity in accounts of episodes and with plausibility of food intolerance. Detail and specificity of accounts of the eating of foods followed by symptoms, when coupled with rareness of the contingency of that food being followed by those symptoms, may prove to be a better predictor of physically diagnosed food intolerance than plausibility by patho‐physiological criteria alone. Copyright © 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/(SICI)1099-0720(199910)13:5<451::AID-ACP608>3.0.CO;2-D
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source Periodicals Index Online; Access via Wiley Online Library; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA)
subjects Applied psychology
Biological and medical sciences
Comparison
Episodic memory
Food intolerance
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Miscellaneous
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychology. Psychophysiology
Semantic memory
title Episodic and semantic memory in accounts of food intolerance
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