Article

Forgiving you is hard, but forgetting seems easy: can forgiveness facilitate forgetting?

Details

Citation

Noreen S, Bierman RN & MacLeod M (2014) Forgiving you is hard, but forgetting seems easy: can forgiveness facilitate forgetting?. Psychological Science, 25 (7), pp. 1295-1302. https://doi.org/10.1177/0956797614531602

Abstract
Forgiveness is considered to play a key role in the maintenance of social relationships, the avoidance of unnecessary conflict, and the ability to move forward with one's life. But why is it that some people find it easier to forgive and forget than others? In the current study, we explored the supposed relationship between forgiveness and forgetting. In an initial session, 30 participants imagined that they were the victim in a series of hypothetical incidents and indicated whether or not they would forgive the transgressor. Following a standard think/no-think procedure, in which participants were trained to think or not to think about some of these incidents, more forgetting was observed for incidents that had been forgiven following no-think instructions compared with either think or baseline instructions. In contrast, no such forgetting effects emerged for incidents that had not previously been forgiven. These findings have implications for goal-directed forgetting and the relationship between forgiveness and memory.

Keywords
forgiveness; motivated forgetting; inhibition

Journal
Psychological Science: Volume 25, Issue 7

StatusPublished
Publication date31/07/2014
Publication date online09/05/2014
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/25037
PublisherSAGE
ISSN0956-7976
eISSN1467-9280

People (1)

Professor Malcolm MacLeod

Professor Malcolm MacLeod

Professor, Psychology

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