Emotional dissociations in temporal associations: opposing effects of arousal on memory for details surrounding unpleasant events.

Research targeting emotion’s impact on relational episodic memory has largely focused on spatial aspects, but less is known about emotion’s impact on memory for an event’s temporal associations. The present research investigated this topic. Participants viewed a series of interspersed negative and neutral images with instructions to create stories linking successive images. Later, participants performed a surprise memory test, which measured temporal associations between pairs of consecutive pictures where one picture was negative and one was neutral. Analyses focused on how the order of negative and neutral images during encoding influenced retrieval accuracy. Converging results from a discovery study (N = 72) and pre-registered replication study (N = 150) revealed a “forward-favoring” effect of emotion in temporal memory encoding: Participants encoded associations between negative stimuli and subsequent neutral stimuli more strongly than associations between negative stimuli and preceding neutral stimuli. This finding may reflect a novel trade-off regarding emotion’s effects on memory and is also relevant for understanding affective disorders, as key clinical symptoms can be conceptualized as maladaptive memory retrieval of temporal details.

[1]  H. Hayne,et al.  Emotional content of the event but not mood influences false memory , 2021, Applied Cognitive Psychology.

[2]  D. Palombo,et al.  A matter of time: how does emotion influence temporal aspects of remembering? , 2021, Cognition & emotion.

[3]  C. Madan,et al.  Emotion Enhances Memory for the Sequential Unfolding of a Naturalistic Experience , 2021 .

[4]  C. Madan,et al.  Exploring the Facets of Emotional Episodic Memory: Remembering “What,” “When,” and “Which” , 2021, Psychological science.

[5]  R. Benoit,et al.  Memory suppression and its deficiency in psychological disorders: A focused meta-analysis. , 2020, Journal of experimental psychology. General.

[6]  N. Burgess,et al.  Reduced Memory Coherence for Negative Events and Its Relationship to Posttraumatic Stress Disorder , 2020, Current directions in psychological science.

[7]  A. Meulders Fear in the context of pain: Lessons learned from 100 years of fear conditioning research. , 2020, Behaviour research and therapy.

[8]  B. Anderson,et al.  The influence of threat on the efficiency of goal-directed attentional control , 2020, Psychological Research.

[9]  F. Dolcos,et al.  The impact of focused attention on subsequent emotional recollection: A functional MRI investigation , 2020, Neuropsychologia.

[10]  C. Bermeitinger,et al.  Emotional oddball: A review on memory effects , 2019, Psychonomic Bulletin & Review.

[11]  Alexandru D. Iordan,et al.  Brain Activity and Network Interactions in the Impact of Internal Emotional Distraction. , 2019, Cerebral cortex.

[12]  N. Daw,et al.  A retrieved context model of the emotional modulation of memory , 2018, bioRxiv.

[13]  N. Burgess,et al.  Differential effects of negative emotion on memory for items and associations, and their relationship to intrusive imagery , 2017, Current Opinion in Behavioral Sciences.

[14]  Pascale Piolino,et al.  “Being there” and remembering it: Presence improves memory encoding , 2017, Consciousness and Cognition.

[15]  Tobias Sommer,et al.  Emotional arousal impairs association-memory: Roles of amygdala and hippocampus , 2017, NeuroImage.

[16]  L. Davachi,et al.  Emotional brain states carry over and enhance future memory formation , 2016, Nature Neuroscience.

[17]  Enrico Toffalini,et al.  Arousal—But Not Valence—Reduces False Memories at Retrieval , 2016, PloS one.

[18]  Jeffrey S Katz,et al.  Military Affective Picture System (MAPS): A new emotion-based stimuli set for assessing emotional processing in military populations. , 2016, Journal of behavior therapy and experimental psychiatry.

[19]  P. Piazza,et al.  Abnormal Fear Memory as a Model for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder , 2015, Biological Psychiatry.

[20]  A. Postma,et al.  Binding Temporal Context in Memory: Impact of Emotional Arousal as a Function of State Anxiety and State Dissociation , 2015, The Journal of nervous and mental disease.

[21]  F. Dolcos,et al.  Neural correlates of 'distracting' from emotion during autobiographical recollection. , 2015, Social cognitive and affective neuroscience.

[22]  G. Murphy,et al.  Categories, concepts, and conditioning: how humans generalize fear , 2015, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.

[23]  L. Carretié Exogenous (automatic) attention to emotional stimuli: a review , 2014, Cognitive, affective & behavioral neuroscience.

[24]  F. Dolcos,et al.  The Effect of Retrieval Focus and Emotional Valence on the Inferior Frontal Cortex Activity during Autobiographical Recollection , 2013, Front. Behav. Neurosci..

[25]  G. A. Miller,et al.  Emotional Distractors Can Enhance Attention , 2013, Psychological science.

[26]  A. Grabowska,et al.  The Nencki Affective Picture System (NAPS): Introduction to a novel, standardized, wide-range, high-quality, realistic picture database , 2013, Behavior research methods.

[27]  F. Dolcos,et al.  The Effect of Retrieval Focus and Emotional Valence on the Medial Temporal Lobe Activity during Autobiographical Recollection , 2013, Front. Behav. Neurosci..

[28]  M. Wiederman,et al.  Childhood trauma and pain and pain catastrophizing in adulthood: a cross-sectional survey study. , 2013, The primary care companion for CNS disorders.

[29]  M. Bradley,et al.  Explicit and spontaneous retrieval of emotional scenes: electrophysiological correlates. , 2013, Emotion.

[30]  Ilse van Damme Mood and the DRM paradigm: An investigation of the effects of valence and arousal on false memory , 2013, Quarterly journal of experimental psychology.

[31]  F. Dolcos Linking enhancing and impairing effects of emotion—the case of PTSD , 2013, Front. Integr. Neurosci..

[32]  L. Davachi,et al.  Memory for time and place contributes to enhanced confidence in memories for emotional events. , 2012, Emotion.

[33]  E. Kensinger,et al.  The effects of emotion and encoding strategy on associative memory , 2012, Memory & cognition.

[34]  J. Caplan,et al.  Emotional arousal does not enhance association-memory , 2012 .

[35]  Margaret L. Schlichting,et al.  The hippocampus and inferential reasoning: building memories to navigate future decisions , 2012, Front. Hum. Neurosci..

[36]  Douglas A McQuiggan,et al.  The role of overt attention in emotion-modulated memory. , 2011, Emotion.

[37]  K. Scherer,et al.  The Geneva affective picture database (GAPED): a new 730-picture database focusing on valence and normative significance , 2011, Behavior research methods.

[38]  M. Mather,et al.  Arousal-Biased Competition in Perception and Memory , 2011, Perspectives on psychological science : a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.

[39]  E. Kensinger,et al.  Emotion's influence on memory for spatial and temporal context , 2011, Cognition & emotion.

[40]  Richard J. Maddock,et al.  Reduced memory for the spatial and temporal context of unpleasant words , 2009 .

[41]  V. Reyna,et al.  How Does Negative Emotion Cause False Memories? , 2008, Psychological science.

[42]  Roberto Cabeza,et al.  The Short and Long of It: Neural Correlates of Temporal-order Memory for Autobiographical Events , 2008, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[43]  R. Bryant,et al.  Rumination and overgeneral autobiographical memory. , 2007, Behaviour research and therapy.

[44]  D. Schacter,et al.  Remembering the past to imagine the future: the prospective brain , 2007, Nature Reviews Neuroscience.

[45]  Stephen D. Smith,et al.  The naked truth: Positive, arousing distractors impair rapid target perception , 2007 .

[46]  Rachel J. Garoff-Eaton,et al.  Effects of Emotion on Memory Specificity: Memory Trade-Offs Elicited by Negative Visually Arousing Stimuli. , 2007 .

[47]  Marvin M. Chun,et al.  Attentional rubbernecking: Cognitive control and personality in emotion-induced blindness , 2005, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[48]  K. Nielson,et al.  Memory enhancement by a semantically unrelated emotional arousal source induced after learning , 2005, Neurobiology of Learning and Memory.

[49]  P. A. Lewis,et al.  Brain mechanisms for mood congruent memory facilitation , 2005, NeuroImage.

[50]  R. Cabeza,et al.  Remembering one year later: role of the amygdala and the medial temporal lobe memory system in retrieving emotional memories. , 2005, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[51]  Tali Sharot,et al.  How emotion enhances the feeling of remembering , 2004, Nature Neuroscience.

[52]  H. Critchley,et al.  Mood-dependent memory , 2003, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.

[53]  R. Adolphs,et al.  The amygdala's role in long-term declarative memory for gist and detail. , 2001, Behavioral neuroscience.

[54]  J. Easterbrook The effect of emotion on cue utilization and the organization of behavior. , 1959, Psychological review.

[55]  E. Kensinger,et al.  The emotion-induced memory trade-off: More than an effect of overt attention? , 2013, Memory & cognition.

[56]  K. Nielson,et al.  Positive and negative sources of emotional arousal enhance long-term word-list retention when induced as long as 30 min after learning. , 2007, Neurobiology of learning and memory.

[57]  Elizabeth A. Olson,et al.  Eyewitness testimony. , 2003, Annual review of psychology.

[58]  Stephen Maren Neurobiology of Pavlovian fear conditioning. , 2001, Annual review of neuroscience.

[59]  P. Lang International Affective Picture System (IAPS) : Technical Manual and Affective Ratings , 1995 .