- Title Pages
- Contributors
- Digital media accompanying the book
- Chapter 1 Collaborative Remembering: Background and Approaches
- Chapter 2 Socializing Early Skills for Remembering Through Parent–Child Conversations During and After Events
- Chapter 3 Developing Social Functions of Autobiographical Memory within Family Storytelling
- Chapter 4 Collaborative Inhibition in Group Recall: Cognitive Principles and Implications
- Chapter 5 Social Aspects of Forgetting
- Chapter 6 Memory Conformity Following Collaborative Remembering
- Chapter 7 The Socially Shared Nature of Memory: From Joint Encoding to Communication
- Chapter 8 Collaborative Remembering and Reminiscence in Older Adults
- Chapter 9 Memories and Identities in Conversation with Dementia
- Chapter 10 Multimodal Processes of Joint Remembering in Complex Collaborative Activities
- Chapter 11 Contextualizing Autobiographical Remembering: An Expanded View of Memory
- Chapter 12 Collaborative Processes in Neuropsychological Interviews
- Chapter 13 Collaborative Memory Knowledge: A Distributed Reliabilist Perspective
- Chapter 14 Group-level Cognizing, Collaborative Remembering, and Individuals
- Chapter 15 Remembering Good and Bad Times Together: Functions of Collaborative Remembering
- Chapter 16 Collective Memory: How Groups Remember Their Past
- Chapter 17 Culture in Collaborative Remembering
- Chapter 18 Encouraging Collaborative Remembering Between Young Children and Their Caregivers
- Chapter 19 Parent–Child Construction of Personal Memories in Reminiscing Conversations: Implications for the Development and Treatment of Childhood Psychopathology
- Chapter 20 Forensic Applications of Social Memory Research
- Chapter 21 Digital Media and the Precarity of Memory
- Chapter 22 Design Applications for Social Remembering
- Chapter 23 Applications of Collaborative Memory: Patterns of Success and Failure in Individuals with Hippocampal Amnesia
- Chapter 24 Collaborative Memory Interventions for Age-Related and Alzheimer’s Disease-Related Memory Decline
- Chapter 25 Collaborative Remembering in Dementia: A Focus on Joint Activities
- Chapter 26 Concluding Remarks: Common Themes and Future Directions
- Author Index
- Subject Index
Concluding Remarks: Common Themes and Future Directions
Concluding Remarks: Common Themes and Future Directions
- Chapter:
- (p.459) Chapter 26 Concluding Remarks: Common Themes and Future Directions
- Source:
- Collaborative Remembering
- Author(s):
Michelle L. Meade
Celia B. Harris
Penny Van Bergen
John Sutton
Amanda J. Barnier
- Publisher:
- Oxford University Press
In this chapter, we provide concluding remarks on the edited volume, Collaborative Remembering: Theories, Research, and Applications. We first discuss common themes that emerge across the chapters. Specifically, we discuss points of overlap and contrast between research and applications, costs and benefits of collaboration, accuracy, scaffolding, the shared nature of the original experience, technology, and culture. Given these themes, we then propose that future research should consider the context and goals of collaboration and the nature of individual differences among and within groups. We end the book with a call to integrate methods and concepts from across fields and perspectives.
Keywords: collaborative remembering, social memory, memory, collaboration, collective memory
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- Title Pages
- Contributors
- Digital media accompanying the book
- Chapter 1 Collaborative Remembering: Background and Approaches
- Chapter 2 Socializing Early Skills for Remembering Through Parent–Child Conversations During and After Events
- Chapter 3 Developing Social Functions of Autobiographical Memory within Family Storytelling
- Chapter 4 Collaborative Inhibition in Group Recall: Cognitive Principles and Implications
- Chapter 5 Social Aspects of Forgetting
- Chapter 6 Memory Conformity Following Collaborative Remembering
- Chapter 7 The Socially Shared Nature of Memory: From Joint Encoding to Communication
- Chapter 8 Collaborative Remembering and Reminiscence in Older Adults
- Chapter 9 Memories and Identities in Conversation with Dementia
- Chapter 10 Multimodal Processes of Joint Remembering in Complex Collaborative Activities
- Chapter 11 Contextualizing Autobiographical Remembering: An Expanded View of Memory
- Chapter 12 Collaborative Processes in Neuropsychological Interviews
- Chapter 13 Collaborative Memory Knowledge: A Distributed Reliabilist Perspective
- Chapter 14 Group-level Cognizing, Collaborative Remembering, and Individuals
- Chapter 15 Remembering Good and Bad Times Together: Functions of Collaborative Remembering
- Chapter 16 Collective Memory: How Groups Remember Their Past
- Chapter 17 Culture in Collaborative Remembering
- Chapter 18 Encouraging Collaborative Remembering Between Young Children and Their Caregivers
- Chapter 19 Parent–Child Construction of Personal Memories in Reminiscing Conversations: Implications for the Development and Treatment of Childhood Psychopathology
- Chapter 20 Forensic Applications of Social Memory Research
- Chapter 21 Digital Media and the Precarity of Memory
- Chapter 22 Design Applications for Social Remembering
- Chapter 23 Applications of Collaborative Memory: Patterns of Success and Failure in Individuals with Hippocampal Amnesia
- Chapter 24 Collaborative Memory Interventions for Age-Related and Alzheimer’s Disease-Related Memory Decline
- Chapter 25 Collaborative Remembering in Dementia: A Focus on Joint Activities
- Chapter 26 Concluding Remarks: Common Themes and Future Directions
- Author Index
- Subject Index