“…In the literature, similar detrimental effects for detail information preceding or succeeding the emotion-eliciting event (cf. retrograde amnesia and anterograde amnesia) have been shown in numerous other laboratory studies (Bond & Kirkpatrick, 1982;Brenner, 1973;Christianson & Nilsson, 1984;Detterman, 1975Detterman, , 1976Detterman & Ellis, 1972;Ellis, Detterman, Runcie, McCarver, & Craig, 1971;Erdelyi & Blumenthal, 1973;Fisk & Wickens, 1979;Kramer et al, 1991;Runcie & O'Bannon, 1977;Saufley & Winograd, 1970;Schultz, 1971;Tulving, 1969). Note, however, that in all of these studies, demonstrating laboratoryinduced retrograde or anterograde amnesia effects, the critical emotion-eliciting event (i.e., the amnesic agent) is remembered very well and typically shows a von Restorff effect (improved memory performance on a single distinctive item embedded in the middle of a serial list, see Wallace, 1965).…”