Abstract
In everyday life remembering occurs within social contexts, and theories from a number of disciplines predict
cognitive and social benefits of shared remembering. Recent debates have revolved around the possibility
that cognition can be distributed across individuals and material resources, as well as across groups of
individuals. We review evidence from a maturing program of empirical research in which we adopted the
lens of distributed cognition to gain new insights into the ways that remembering might be shared in groups.
Across four studies, we examined shared remembering in intimate couples. We studied their collaboration
on more simple memory tasks as well as their conversations about shared past experiences. We also asked
them about their everyday memory compensation strategies in order to investigate the complex ways that
couples may coordinate their material and interpersonal resources. We discuss our research in terms of
the costs and benefits of shared remembering, features of the group and features of the remembering task
that influence the outcomes of shared remembering, the cognitive and interpersonal functions of shared
remembering, and the interaction between social and material resources. More broadly, this interdisciplinary
research program suggests the potential for empirical psychology research to contribute to ongoing
interdisciplinary discussions of distributed cognition.