Litcius/Paper detail

The Mechanisms Underlying Interference and Inhibition: A Review of Current Behavioral and Neuroimaging Research

Oliver Kliegl, Karl‐Heinz T. Bäuml

2021Brain Sciences19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The memory literature has identified interference and inhibition as two major sources of forgetting. While interference is generally considered to be a passive cause of forgetting arising from exposure to additional information that impedes subsequent recall of target information, inhibition concerns a more active and goal-directed cause of forgetting that can be achieved intentionally. Over the past 25 years, our knowledge of the neural mechanisms underlying both interference-induced and inhibition-induced forgetting has expanded substantially. The present paper gives a critical overview of this research, pointing out empirical gaps in the current work and providing suggestions for future studies.

Topics & Concepts

ForgettingRecallNeuroimagingMotivated forgettingRetrieval-induced forgettingInterference (communication)Interference theoryCognitive psychologyNeuroscienceMechanism (biology)PsychologyComputer scienceWorking memoryCognitionTelecommunicationsPhilosophyEpistemologyChannel (broadcasting)Memory Processes and InfluencesMemory and Neural MechanismsNeural and Behavioral Psychology Studies