Poster sessions

Overview of poster session I

Tuesday 27 September 13.30 – 15.00 


Social, collective, and cultural aspects of autobiographical memory I

101 Cancelled               
A vicarious reminiscence bump: Older adults’ memories of their children’s lives. Ozdemir, Leichtman, & Pillemer 

102              
Emotional language use in vicarious and personal memory for older and younger adults. Steiner & Andries

103              
Where we come from: Family stories about the war serve individual and collective functions. Cordonnier

104              
Gender differences in adults’ intergenerational narratives. Kemper, Leidenberger, & Habermas

105 Cancelled              
Age-related changes in vicarious memories. Bakir-Demir, Reese, Sahin-Acar, & Taumoepeau
 


Functions of autobiographical memory

106              
Personal and scripted events varied in memory functions and characteristics. Ay & Gülgöz

107              
When remembering hurts: Autobiographical memory and grief across adulthood. Wolf & Bluck

108              
Comparing phenomenological and functional characteristics of young adults’ exciting memories with their positive and negative memories. Elibol-Pekaslan, Varol, & Kara 

109              
Reminiscing about the past with others in everyday life: A naturalistic observation study of young and older adults. Demiray & Ferrario
 


Emotional memories

110              
Does age at trauma matter? The relationship between age and PTSD-symptoms. Kongshøj, Bohn, & Berntsen 

111              
Can perceived changes in autobiographical memories’ emotionality be explained by memory characteristics and personality traits? Hoehne

112              
Autobiographical memories of envy: Exploring childhood, adolescent, and adult recollections. Santarossa & Pullin

113 Cancelled             
Autobiographical memories of anger and shame over the lifespan. Young & Pullin

114              
Memories of childhood and adult play: Effects of nostalgia on play attitudes and purchase intent. Zaragoza Scherman, Salgado, Zosh, Bluck, & Berntsen
 


Autobiographical memory across the life span

115 Cancelled             
Coherence of child maltreatment narratives by emerging adults: How does child maltreatment affect how we share our story? Fishere & Habermas

116              
To ask or not to ask: Strategic recall, but not spontaneous recall, decreases by the passage of time in 46-month-olds’ memory of a unique event. Sonne, Jensen, Kingo, Berntsen, & Krøjgaard

117              
Comparing deferred imitation and joint attentional activities in 6- 8- 10- and 12-month-old infants. Beyer, Kingo, Sonne, & Krøjgaard

118              
Remembering dynamic events in infancy: Manipulating the amount of encoding. Gaïni, Sonne, Krøjgaard, & Kingo
 


Covid–19 and autobiographical memory

119              
Maintaining intimacy during the COVID-19 pandemic. Wolf & Nusser

120              
False memory in the COVID-19 outbreak: The effects of pandemic-related stress and negative emotions. Güçlü & Öner

121              
Age differences in remembering the pandemic: Findings from 15 countries. Öner & Watson

122              
Spontaneous past and future thinking about the COVID-19 pandemic across 14 countries: Effects of individual and country-level COVID-19 impact indicators. Watson, Cole, Markostamou, Barzykowski, Ergen, Taylor, & Öner
 


Mental time travel and future thinking

123              
Looking back to the future: Effect of future thinking perspective on characteristics of autobiographical future events. Roderer, Watson, & Bohn

124              
The effect of nostalgic music on future thinking. Matsumoto, Zenmoto, & Ito 

125              
Personal goal characteristics predict the occurrence of imagined future events. Jimenez & D'Argembeau

126              
Emotional closure in autobiographical memories: Investigating future events for resolve. Ergen & Gülgöz

127              
Past and future life story chapters among individuals with an increased suicide risk: An empirical study. Hansen, Thomsen, Jensen, Pedersen, & Bøye

128 Cancelled               
The relationship between episodic future thinking and biased retelling characteristics. Ikeda, Kawasaki, Sato, & Nishiura


 

Overview of poster session II

Wednesday 28 September 13.30 – 15.00 


Social, collective, and cultural aspects of autobiographical memory II

201              
Age effects in imaging past and future collective events. Öner & Gülgöz

202              
Historical change in the Emirati life script. Camia, Alhallami, Alhattali, Alhosani, & Bohn

203 Cancelled              
How do we learn the cultural life script? Koppel

204              
The days we never forget: Flashbulb memories across the lifespan in patients with Alzheimer’s disease. Rasmussen, Kirk, Overgaard, & Berntsen
 


Cueing and retrieval processes

205              
Direct and generative autobiographical memory retrieval in mild cognitive impairment. Markostamou & Kvavilashvili

206              
Beyond amnesia, understanding intrusive memories in Alzheimer's disease. Allé & Antoine

207              
Clinical investigations of music-evoked autobiographical memories: A systematic review. Kaiser & Berntsen

208              
Cued autobiographical memory recall is less taxing and enhances cognitive reappraisal in older relative to younger adults. Orlovsky, Heideman, Hareli, Wood, Patel, & Martins-Klein


Narrative and linguistic style

209              
Interpersonal memory fidelity judgments regarding autobiographical narratives in young and older participants. Bastin

210              
Autobiographical memory and storytelling style in older and younger adults. Rathbone & Carver

211              
The fixed nature of 'narrative crystals'. Gerstenberg & Hamilton

212              
Predicting the effect of life narratives on readers by narrators’ linguistic style. Martin & Habermas

213              
How do linguistic and thematic repetitions in autobiographical narratives differ between elderly adults with depression, Alzheimer disease, and healthy controls? Habermas, Gruler, Jaeschke, Rapp, Weygandt, & Frisch
 


Self, identity, and meaning-making

214              
Variations in cognitive status in older adults with memory difficulties: The roles of trait personality and resilience. Barbour, Lind, & Bluck

215              
Erikson’s psychosocial stages in important autobiographical memories: Associations with life periods and life satisfaction. Nusser, Zimprich, & Wolf

216              
Impact of Alzheimer dementia and depression on narrative identity: Coherence and distribution of memories across the lifespan in life narratives of elderly adults. Gruler, Weygandt, Jaeschke, Rapp, Frisch, & Habermas

217              
Does the connection of one´s conceptual self and life-events differ between elderly people with depression, Alzheimer- disease and healthy controls throughout autobiographical memories? Rapp, Jaeschke, Gruler, Weygandt, Frisch, & Habermas

218 Cancelled              
Engendering change or creating stability? How older adults deal with biographical ruptures. Peters & Habermas

219              
Neural mechanisms of late-life autobiographical reappraisal through dedifferentiation: A proposed framework and fMRI pilot findings. Martins-Klein, Orlovsky, & Heideman
 


Reminiscence interventions

220 Cancelled               
Activation of memory through storytelling, songs and dance music for the severely demented. Madsen & Dickmeiss

221              
Digital life story books to preserve the self and improve well-being in dementia. Lind & Bluck

222              
Scaffolding autobiographical memory: Can elaborative reminiscing enhance recall of people receiving aged care? Harris, Van Bergen, Strutt, Picard, Brookman, & Nelson

223              
Social relational elements of autobiographical memory among older adults and persons with dementia. Robbins
 


Phenomenological qualities of autobiographical memory

224              
Remembering well and feeling well? Are individual differences in autobiographical memory associated with subjective well-being? Gehrt, Nielsen, Hoyle, Rubin, & Berntsen     

225              
Richer phenomenology of memories central to identity: The indirect effects of rehearsal. Pociunaite & Zimprich

226              
Age and immediate recall using a self-report mental reinstatement procedure for eyewitnesses. Faber, Nielsen, & Berntsen

227              
Tattoos embody autobiographical memories. Klug & Camia

228              
Individual differences in autobiographical memory and creativity. Cardenas & Berntsen