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Chapter 3 - Building Bridges

A Narrative about Two Camps of Autobiographical Memory Researchers

from Part I - How Research on Autobiographical Memory Contrasts with and Integrates the Life Story Approach

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 November 2025

Christin Camia
Affiliation:
Zayed University Abu Dhabi
Annette Bohn
Affiliation:
Aarhus University
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Summary

Two distinct lines of research characterize the psychological work on autobiographical memory. One line of research examines the way people give meaning to their lives and achieve a sense of personal identity, often in the form of narrative construction. An alternative line of research questions experimental psychologists have been asking about memory more generally, but now focuses on phenomena of autobiographical memory, such as conditions of retrieval and forgetting. Each line of research undoubtedly taps into important facets of autobiographical memory. But at present, the investigative efforts might be more accurately described as siloes rather than lines of research. Indeed, one could delve deeply into one of these siloes and be perfectly unaware that a whole body of research on autobiographical memory exists outside the silo. This chapter examines why research on autobiographical memory has become so siloed, exploring methodological differences, but also the differences in what each might view as basic, fundamental questions. It then turns to what is lost by the siloing of autobiographical memory research and ends by urging more interaction between the two areas.

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Autobiographical Memory and the Life Story
New Perspectives on Narrative Identity
, pp. 34 - 59
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2025

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