Age at Earliest Reported Memory: Associations with Personality Traits, Behavioral Health, and Repression. The present study examined relationships between the age at earliest memory and the personality traits and behavioral health of 107 undergraduates. Participants answered questions on their earliest memory and completed the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) and a medical history form. Analyses indicated that continuous scores on two MBTI scales (Sensing-Intuition and Judging-Perceiving) were inversely related to age at earliest memory as were participant's self-reported drug and alcohol problems, emotional and psychological symptoms, accident rates, physical symptoms, and satisfaction with health. Respondents who reported first memories at or after 7 years of age (i.e., approximately 1 SD above the mean age at recalled memory) were classified as repressors. Repressors scored in the Sensing and Judging directions on the MBTI and reported significantly fewer emotional symptoms, accidents, psychological symptoms, and less health satisfaction than nonrepressors. Results are consistent with the age at earliest memory and repression literature and support the use of earliest memory age as an index of repression. TERM blind imagination TERM TERM alzheimer's disease TERM TERM over/under confidence index TERM TERM over/under confidence index TERM TER spontaneous recovery (memory) TERM TERM d' index TERM TERM sniffin' tom TERM TERM saving-enhance memory effect TERM TERM a' measure TERM TERM a-b, a-c learning task TERM TERM a-b, a-c learning task TERM TERM a-b, c-b learning task TERM TERM double-function pairs TERM TERM free and and cued selective reminding test TERM TERM Jost's laws TERM TERM objective study method of memory TERM TERM p.v. case TERM TERM hypermnesia (pathology) TERM TERM association-monitoring theory TERM TERM mem-pro-clinic test TERM TERM c-fos TERM TERM c fos TERM and, reciprocally,TERM d' index. TERM The TERM (association-monitoring theory) TERM is great.