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Negative affect promotes encoding of and memory for details at the expense of the gist: Affect, encoding, and false memories

Pages 800-819 | Received 27 Nov 2011, Accepted 12 Oct 2012, Published online: 08 Nov 2012
 

Abstract

I investigated whether negative affective states enhance encoding of and memory for item-specific information reducing false memories. Positive, negative, and neutral moods were induced, and participants then completed a Deese–Roediger–McDermott (DRM) false-memory task. List items were presented in unique spatial locations or unique fonts to serve as measures for item-specific encoding. The negative mood conditions had more accurate memories for item-specific information, and they also had fewer false memories. The final experiment used a manipulation that drew attention to distinctive information, which aided learning for DRM words, but also promoted item-specific encoding. For the condition that promoted item-specific encoding, false memories were reduced for positive and neutral mood conditions to a rate similar to that of the negative mood condition. These experiments demonstrated that negative affective cues promote item-specific processing reducing false memories. People in positive and negative moods encode events differently creating different memories for the same event.

Notes

1An analysis was conducted to determine whether the effects differed as a result of the first or second mood induction. I compared the recall effects for presented items, critical lures, spatial locations, and errors in separate repeated-measures ANOVAs with the first and second mood induction as the repeated variable and mood as a between-subjects factor. No overall significant differences emerged, all Fs < 1.

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