When non-salient information becomes salient in conversational memory: Collaboration shapes the effects of emotion and self-production - Archive ouverte HAL Accéder directement au contenu
Article Dans Une Revue Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Année : 2021

When non-salient information becomes salient in conversational memory: Collaboration shapes the effects of emotion and self-production

Résumé

People’s memory of what was said and who said what during dialogue plays a central role in mutual comprehension and subsequent adaptation. This article outlines that well-established effects in conversational memory such as the self-production and the emotional effects actually depend on the nature of the interaction. We specifically focus on the impact of the collaborative nature of the interaction, comparing participants’ conversational memory in non-collaborative and collaborative interactive settings involving interactions between two people (i.e., dialogue). The findings reveal that the amplitude of these conversational memory effects depends on the collaborative vs. non-collaborative nature of the interaction. The effects are attenuated when people have the opportunity to collaborate because information that remained non-salient in the non-collaborative condition (neutral and partner-produced words) became salient in the collaborative condition to a level similar to otherwise salient information (emotional and self-produced words). We highlight the importance of these findings in the study of dialogue and conversational memory.

Domaines

Psychologie

Dates et versions

hal-03560977 , version 1 (07-02-2022)

Identifiants

Citer

Ludovic Le Bigot, Cléo Bangoura, Dominique Knutsen, Sandrine Gil. When non-salient information becomes salient in conversational memory: Collaboration shapes the effects of emotion and self-production. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 2021, pp.174702182110550. ⟨10.1177/17470218211055005⟩. ⟨hal-03560977⟩
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