Forgotten but not gone: The recall and recognition of self-threatening memories
Green, J. D., Sedikides, C., & Gregg, A. P. (2008). Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 44, 547-61.
Abstract: When people selectively forget feedback that threatens the self (mnemic neglect),
are those memories permanently lost or potentially recoverable? In two
experiments, participants processed feedback pertaining either to
themselves or to another person. Feedback consisted of a mixture of
positive and negative behaviors exemplifying traits that were both
central and peripheral to participants’ self-definition. In Experiment
1, participants exhibited poorer recall for, but unimpaired recognition
of, self-threatening feedback (i.e., negative, central, self-referent), relative to both self-affirming feedback (positive, central, self-referent) and other-relevant
feedback (positive/negative, central, other-referent). In Experiment 2,
participants who had experienced ego-deflation, but not ego-inflation,
exhibited mnemic neglect for recall, but not for recognition. Both
experiments imply that, even after being self-protectively neglected,
self-threatening memories can still be retrieved.
Source: ScienceDirect