What I Don't Recall Can't Hurt Me: Information Negativity Versus Information Inconsistency As Determinants of Memorial Self-defense
Sedikides, C., & Green, J. D. (2004). Social Cognition, 22, 4-29.
According to the mnemic neglect model, people are threatened by
feedback that has unfavorable implications for their central
self-aspects, and, as a result, they recall it poorly. What is the
locus of such poor recall (i.e., mnemic neglect)? Experiment 1 examined
the role of information inconsistency. If mnemic neglect is due to
expectancy violation, then it will be observed for any referent (e.g.,
self, friend, glowingly-described other) controlling for expectancy
positivity. Mnemic neglect was obtained for the self but not a friend
or a glowingly-described other. Experiment 2 disentangled the roles of
information inconsistency and information negativity. Participants with
positive and those with negative self-concepts both manifested mnemic
neglect. Negative, rather than inconsistent, feedback drives mnemic
neglect.