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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Sep 23, 2025

Virtual Hand with Ambiguous Movement between the Self and Other Origin: Sense of Ownership and 'Other-Produced' Agency
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Temporality, Language and Body in Collaborative Remembering: a Videographic Study.

David Rodríguez1, Himmbler Olivares2

  • 1Departamento de Psicología, Laboratorio de Psicología, Universidad de Concepción, Barrio Universitario s/n, 4070386, Concepción, Chile.

Integrative Psychological & Behavioral Science
|May 17, 2022
PubMed
Summary

Collaborative remembering is a coordinated phenomenon, not just based on language. Bodily motion and temporal aspects are key to how groups jointly recall shared experiences.

Keywords:
Co-phenomenologyCollaborative rememberingCross cueingOrganon model of languageTemporality

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Social Psychology
  • Phenomenology

Background:

  • Collaborative remembering involves recalling shared narratives.
  • Previous research focused on linguistic cues for memory elicitation.
  • This study explores non-linguistic aspects of collaborative recall.

Purpose of the Study:

  • Investigate collaborative remembering cues beyond linguistic prompts.
  • Examine the roles of temporality, corporality, and meaning-making.
  • Analyze the coordinative nature of shared memory.

Main Methods:

  • Two-stage videographic analysis of student interactions.
  • Qualitative data analysis using Karl Bühler's organon model.
  • Focus on bodily motion coordination and temporal aspects.

Main Results:

  • The appellative dimension (addressing others) is prominent.
  • Complementary interaction patterns are more common than simultaneous ones.
  • Collaborative remembering emerges as a coordinated, embodied phenomenon.

Conclusions:

  • Shared remembering is a unified, coordinative act.
  • Temporality and embodiment are crucial for joint memory construction.
  • A co-phenomenological approach illuminates intersubjectivity in recall.