Emotion and memory narrowing: A review and goal-relevance approach

Cognition and Emotion 23 (5):833-875 (2009)
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Abstract

People typically show excellent memory for information that is central to an emotional event but poorer memory for peripheral details. Not all studies demonstrate memory narrowing as a result of emotion, however. Critically important emotional information is sometimes forgotten; seemingly peripheral details are sometimes preserved. To make sense of both the general pattern of findings that emotion leads to memory narrowing, and findings that violate this pattern, this review addresses mechanisms through which emotion enhances and impairs memory. Divergent approaches to characterising information as central versus peripheral are also addressed. By directly contrasting these approaches, and the evidence supporting them, this review helps to clarify when and how emotion enhances memory and provides directions for future research. Evidence shows that memory narrowing as a result of emotion, and a number of violations of the memory narrowing pattern, can be explained by the view that emotion enhances memory for information relevant to currently active goals.

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Memory for Emotional Events.Friderike Heuer & Daniel Reisberg - 2004 - In Daniel Reisberg & Paula Hertel, Memory and Emotion. Oxford University Press.

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References found in this work

Rationality in reasoning: The problem of deductive competence.Jonathan Evans & David E. Over - unknown - Current Psychology of Cognition 16 (1-2):3-38.
Towards a Cognitive Theory of Emotions.Keith Oatley & P. N. Johnson-Laird - 1987 - Cognition and Emotion 1 (1):29-50.
Relevance.D. Sperbcr & I. Wilson - forthcoming - Communication and Cognition: An Interdisciplinary Quarterly Journal.

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