Misremembering solitude: the role of personality and cultural self-concepts in shaping discrepancies between recalled and concurrent affect in solitude

Jennifer C. Lay*, Yuen Wan Ho, Dwight C. K. Tse, Jimmy T. K. Tse, Da Jiang*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)
2 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Background
Affect recall is key to psychological assessment and decision-making. However, self-concepts (self-beliefs) may bias retrospective affect reports such that they deviate from lived experiences. Does this experience-memory gap apply to solitude experiences? We hypothesized that individuals misremember how they feel overall and when in solitude, in line with self-concepts of introversion, self-determined/not-self-determined solitude motivations, and independent/interdependent self-construal. A pilot study comparing retrospective to daily affect reports captured over 2 weeks (N = 104 UK university students) provided preliminary evidence of introversion and not-self-determined solitude shaping affect recall.

Methods
In the main pre-registered study, participants aged 18–49 in the UK (N = 160) and Hong Kong (N = 159) reported their momentary affective states and social situations 5 times per day over 7 days, then recalled how they felt over the week.

Results and Discussion
Individuals higher in self-determined solitude were more prone to retrospectively overestimate their high- and low-arousal positive affect in solitude and showed less overestimation/more underestimation of negative affect in solitude. Higher not-self-determined solitude was associated with overestimating loneliness, and higher interdependent self-construal with overestimating loneliness and energy levels, in solitude. Comparisons based on residence/ethnicity suggest culture influences solitude-seeking and affective memory. Implications for well-being and affect measurement are discussed.
Original languageEnglish
Number of pages19
JournalJournal of Personality
Early online date16 Aug 2024
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 16 Aug 2024

Keywords

  • memory
  • solitude
  • retrospective reports
  • affect
  • self‐concept
  • experience sampling method
  • culture

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