Survival processing occupies the central bottleneck of cognitive processing: A psychological refractory period analysis

  • Words judged for relevance in a survival situation are remembered better than words judged for relevance in a nonsurvival context. This survival processing effect has been explained by selective tuning of human memory during evolution to process and retain information specifically relevant for survival. According to the richness-of-encoding hypothesis the survival processing effect arises from a domain-general mechanism—namely, a particularly rich and distinct form of encoding. This form of information processing is effortful and requires limited cognitive capacities. In our experiment, we used the well-established psychological refractory period framework in conjunction with the effect propagation logic to assess the role of central cognitive resources for the survival processing effect. Our data demonstrate that the survival memory advantage indeed relies on the capacity-limited central stage of cognitive processing. Thus, rating words in the context of a survival scenario involves central processing resources to a greater amount than rating words in a nonsurvival control condition. We discuss implications for theories of the survival processing effect.

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Metadaten
Author:Meike KroneisenORCiD, Edgar Erdfelder, Rika Maria Groß, Markus Janczyk
URN:urn:nbn:de:hbz:386-kluedo-89775
DOI:https://doi.org/10.3758/s13423-023-02340-z
ISSN:1531-5320
Parent Title (English):Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
Publisher:Springer Nature
Document Type:Article
Language of publication:English
Date of Publication (online):2025/04/16
Year of first Publication:2023
Publishing Institution:Rheinland-Pfälzische Technische Universität Kaiserslautern-Landau
Date of the Publication (Server):2025/04/17
Issue:(2024) Vol.31
Page Number:9
First Page:274
Last Page:282
Source:https://link.springer.com/article/10.3758/s13423-023-02340-z
Faculties / Organisational entities:Landau - Fachbereich Psychologie
DDC-Cassification:1 Philosophie und Psychologie / 150 Psychologie
Collections:Open-Access-Publikationsfonds
Licence (German):Creative Commons 4.0 - Namensnennung (CC BY 4.0)