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Alix Fan Club

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Gabriel Gomez
Gabriel Gomez

Forgotten Memories Script Teleport Entity E... [EXCLUSIVE]


Every traveler will see something different, and the setting that the level decides on will be devoid of life. It is impossible to exit the main area where your childhood memory is focused; attempting to so will result in you leaving the level. If the wanderer lacks or cannot remember any childhood memories, the level's appearance will conform to match the setting of the wanderer's earliest known memory. Level 18 will change form frequently, cycling between many different settings from your childhood. Every setting has one thing in common being that voices in your head will mimic your interactions from that childhood memory. Unfortunately, these are no ordinary interactions. These interactions are the embarrassing moments of your life that the level forces you to relive. All the mistakes you made, all the regrets you have. You may have long forgotten these interactions, refusing to dwell on the bad parts of your life, but Level 18 always remembers. It never forgets.




Forgotten Memories Script | Teleport | Entity E...


Download File: https://www.google.com/url?q=https%3A%2F%2Furluso.com%2F2uivMt&sa=D&sntz=1&usg=AOvVaw2zyerPhSWPHP1UbGqZHYoa



Adolescence and early adulthood have been described as important times in memory encoding because individuals typically recall a disproportionate number of autobiographical memories from those periods.[3][4] The reminiscence bump accounts for this disproportionate number of memories. The reminiscence bump typically occurs between 10 years of age and 30 years of age and is the period that individuals produce the most memories during free recall tasks.[5] Research suggests that memories are easily accessible from the reminiscence bump because they are linked to self-identity.[6] The memories found within the reminiscence bump significantly contribute to an individual's life goals, self-theories, attitudes, and beliefs.[6] Additionally, life events that occur during the period of the reminiscence bump, such as graduation, marriage, or the birth of a child, are often very novel, thus, making them more memorable.[2]


The narrative/identity account suggests that the reminiscence bump occurs because a sense of self-identity develops during adolescence and early adulthood.[3] Research suggests that memories that have more influence and significance to one's self are more frequently rehearsed in defining one's identity, and are therefore better remembered later in life (Ece & Gulgoz, 2014). Self-identity formation provides added motivation for using cognitive processes to ensure recall of these memories.[3] The events from this period are more likely to be organized into a story or view of oneself, and benefits from the advantage of schematic organization in memory.[3]


There is one additional theory that explains the occurrence of the reminiscence bump: the life script account. A life script refers to the series of culturally important transitional events that are expected to occur in a certain order at various points during the life span.[9] During early adulthood one starts to make important decisions and have influencing experiences on his or her identity. The memories during this time period are therefore more significantly remembered because they are what has essentially determined and influenced their life script (Habernas & Bluck, 2000). A life script typically has the majority of expected transitional experiences occur during early adulthood (Gluck & Bluck, 2007), and usually includes positive experiences such as marriage, the birth of a baby, or buying a house. Events that deviate from the life script are typically sad and traumatic. These events, such as the death of a child, are not culturally expected and often do not show a peak of recall at any specific point during the life span.[7] Life scripts act as a way to structure memory and lead to the expectation that the happiest and the most important life events form the reminiscence bump. Contrary to the recall of happy events, the recall of sad events remains stable across the life span and does not exhibit a bump in recall.[7]


Researchers have studied different types of memories in order to find some clues into how the reminiscence bump works and how memories are stored and retrieved. Participants were asked to retrieve memories that were classified as either public or private to try to find differences in terms of when these memories were stored.[9] Public events are events that everyone living at the time know about and are exposed to (political, war/murder, sports/entertainment or news events), but private events are only experienced by the individual (relationships, births/deaths, work/education, home/leisure, illness and religion).[9] When recalling public events, participants were between ages 10 and 19; and when recalling private events, participants were between 20 and 29.[9] Researchers suggest that public events are recalled at an earlier age because individuals are gaining a sense of generational identity.[20] People are starting to create their own beliefs and their individual identity, so these experiences are being rehearsed, practiced and stored in long-term memory.[9] Private events are recalled later because this is when individuals are developing intimate relationship.[21] Private events are more easily stored and recalled because they are unique to each person and are likely occurring without any outside influence.[9]


A study done in 2005 showed more accurate age results that were dependent on culture and gender. American women and men showed reminiscence bumps at age 13 and 17, respectively, while Dutch participants show a more progressive development of encoding strength around age 15.[23] Studies with an identical methodology found peaks in the same period with Polish[25] and Japanese[26] participants. Supporting this study, there was research done that compared the distribution of memories of participants from Bangladesh, China, England, Japan, and the United States. The research found a greater number of childhood memories among American participants than in other cultural groups.[27] While the timing of the reminiscence bump is generally thought to be culturally universal, with some minor difference in the period of life from which memories are recalled, there are studies that offer support for the notion that similar life scripts, at least for positive events, might also be found across different cultures.[28]


A life script is a schema that outlines cultural appropriate events that individuals should experience during a specific time period. (Berntsen & Rubin, 2004). The life script account argues that the reminiscence bump occurs because individuals use life script memories to provide a basis of recalling important memories. The life script events often contain more memories during early adulthood, or the reminiscence bump, than any other age period (Berntsen & Rubin, 2004).The life script account emphasizes norms and expectations typical of a given culture with regard to the timing of major life events.[28] The order and timing of the major events may differ depending on the culture. The life script is a representation of the sequence of normative and major life events. Individuals know the culturally shared expectations of the order and timing of life events in a prototypical life, and are also aware of their own timing in relations to those norms.[28] It assumes that people have an internalized culturally-aware script of the events that make up an expected, skeletal life course; this script acts as a template for the recall of life events in association with each life phase.[29]


The events in a life script are often positive, celebrated, and normative. It represents and idealized life story. An average life would also include negative events and people would learn from experience. But the life script is handed down from older generations, through stories, and observations of the behavior of others, typically older, people within the same culture.[30] Individuals should also remember more during their young adulthood because that era is the time of biological maturation, new experiences, adult identity formation, and major events in life scripts.[33]


Modification of the cultural life script theory include: (1) the theory may benefit from explicitly distinguishing between specific transitional events and extended periods of stability (2) life script theory proposes that requests for negative events should rarely active the cultural life script, because negative events are often unexpected.[34] Their study was based on the individual's unique chapters and specific memories, whereas the cultural life script is a de-personalized and culturally shared knowledge structure. Finally, the cultural life script theory seems unable to explain the reminiscence bump for public events.[27]


These memories have been tested in different ways, including measuring the ability to recall details of the event and the impact of additional cues on the recall of the event.[36] Denver, Lane and Cherry found that flashbulb memories that took place in the reminiscence bump were exceptionally vivid and easily accessible.[36] It is suggested that the flashbulb memories encoded during the reminiscence bump are so vivid because the events happened during a time of identity formation and peak brain function.[36] Additionally, these events are recalled well because they undergo more rehearsal due to their serious nature and frequent discussion.


Maria: Do you know a little girl named Amy? Ernest: Why do you ask me that? Maria: This letter, "TO MY DEAREST DADDY"... It's from a girl named Amy Baldwin. You're "DADDY"? Ernest: Yes. Where did you find that? Maria: Up in the attic. Ernest: Oh... What a fool... Now...when it's too late, I finally understand why. Why she was there... Why she was holding that empty envelope when she...when she fell... Maria: Ernest, Amy...She isn't...? I'm sorry. I'm sorry I reminded you. Ernest: No need to apologize. You didn't remind me. I've never forgotten... Maria. Some things we forget and some things we can never forget...... It's funny...I'm not sure which one is sadder. It's been 10 years, but I still...... Maria: Ernest...I'm sorry. I didn't know... Ernest: No, it's fine. Maria, that letter... Maria: I'll leave it here. 041b061a72


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