I remember therefore I am: Episodic memory retrieval and self-reported trait empathy judgments in young and older adults and individuals with medial temporal lobe excisions

Cognition. 2022 Aug:225:105124. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2022.105124. Epub 2022 Apr 25.

Abstract

How do we know what sort of people we are? Do we reflect on specific past instances of our own behaviour, or do we just have a general idea? Previous work has emphasized the role of personal semantic memory (general autobiographical knowledge) in how we assess our own personality traits. Using a standardized trait empathy questionnaire, we show in four experiments that episodic autobiographical memory (memory for specific personal events) is associated with people's judgments of their own trait empathy. Specifically, neurologically healthy young adults rated themselves as more empathic on questionnaire items that cued episodic memories of events in which they behaved empathically. This effect, however, was diminished in people who are known to have poor episodic memory: older adults and individuals who have undergone unilateral excision of medial temporal lobe tissue (as treatment for epilepsy). Further, self-report ratings on individual questionnaire items were generally predicted by subjectively rated phenomenological qualities of the memories cued by those items, such as sensory detail, scene coherence, and overall vividness. We argue that episodic and semantic memory play different roles with respect to self-knowledge depending on life experience, the integrity of the medial temporal lobes, and whether one is assessing general abstract traits versus more concrete behaviours that embody these traits. Future research should examine different types of self-knowledge as well as personality traits other than empathy.

Keywords: Aging; Empathy; Episodic memory; Medial temporal lobes; Self-knowledge.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Aged
  • Empathy
  • Humans
  • Judgment
  • Memory Disorders
  • Memory, Episodic*
  • Mental Recall
  • Self Report
  • Temporal Lobe
  • Young Adult

Associated data

  • figshare/10.6084/m9.figshare.13370204

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