A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away: How temporal are episodic contents?

•Does retrieval of episodic content predict retrieval of temporal temporal information?•We find that temporal orientation is not part of the contents of episodic simulations.•Episodic contents contain more information about temporal orientation than about specific times.•Recall of episodic temporali...

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Veröffentlicht in:Consciousness and cognition 2021-11, Vol.96, p.103224-103224, Article 103224
Hauptverfasser: Mahr, Johannes B., Greene, Joshua D., Schacter, Daniel L.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Does retrieval of episodic content predict retrieval of temporal temporal information?•We find that temporal orientation is not part of the contents of episodic simulations.•Episodic contents contain more information about temporal orientation than about specific times.•Recall of episodic temporality might rely on post-retrieval processes. A prominent feature of mental event (i.e. ‘episodic’) simulations is their temporal orientation: human adults can generate episodic representations directed towards the past or the future. Here, we investigated how the temporal orientation of imagined events relates to the contents of these events. Is there something intrinsically temporal about episodic contents? Or does their temporality rely on a distinct set of representations? In three experiments (N = 360), we asked participants to generate and later recall a series of imagined events differing in (1) location, (2) time of day, (3) temporal orientation, and (4) weekday. We then tested to what extent successful recall of episodic content (i.e. (1) and (2)) would predict recall of temporality and/or weekday information. Results showed that recall of temporal orientation was only weakly predicted by recall of episodic contents. Nonetheless, temporal orientation was more strongly predicted by content recall than weekday recall. This finding suggests that episodic simulations are unlikely to be intrinsically temporal in nature. Instead, similar to other forms of temporal information, temporal orientation might be determined from such contents by reconstructive post-retrieval processes. These results have implications for how the human ability to ‘mentally travel’ in time is cognitively implemented.
ISSN:1053-8100
1090-2376
DOI:10.1016/j.concog.2021.103224