All these studies demonstrate a close relationship between remembering past events and imagining future events and explored that our ability to imagine or simulate future events relies on multiple component processes (including working memory, executive control processes, relational processes, visual–spatial processing, self-consciousness, and the apprehension of subjective time), most of which are also involved in remembering past episodes [10]. Most of the processes underlying future thinking are controlled by the components of working memory [10], but Hill & Emery [14] suggested that when imagining future events, working memory contributes to the construction of a single, coherent