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Narrative thinking lingers in spontaneous thought

Psychology

Narrative thinking lingers in spontaneous thought

B. Bellana, A. Mahabal, et al.

Discover the intriguing reasons behind why certain experiences stay etched in our memories while others vanish. This research by Buddhika Bellana, Abhijit Mahabal, and Christopher J. Honey reveals that narrative-level coherence plays a significant role, with our sense of transportation into the story being a key predictor of lingering thoughts. Learn how our minds weave past experiences into deeper narratives.... show more
Abstract
Some experiences linger in mind, spontaneously returning to our thoughts for minutes after their conclusion. Other experiences fall out of mind immediately. It remains unclear why. We hypothesize that an input is more likely to persist in our thoughts when it has been deeply processed: when we have extracted its situational meaning rather than its physical properties or low-level semantics. Here, participants read sequences of words with different levels of coherence (word-, sentence-, or narrative-level). We probe participants' spontaneous thoughts via free word association, before and after reading. By measuring lingering subjectively (via self-report) and objectively (via changes in free association content), we find that information lingers when it is coherent at the narrative level. Furthermore, and an individual's feeling of transportation into reading material predicts lingering better than the material's objective coherence. Thus, our thoughts in the present moment echo prior experiences that have been incorporated into deeper, narrative forms of thinking.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Aug 06, 2022
Authors
Buddhika Bellana, Abhijit Mahabal, Christopher J. Honey
Tags
memory retention
experience coherence
narrative thinking
transportation
spontaneous thoughts
psychological processing
word association
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