2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.tics.2015.02.009
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The slow forgetting of emotional episodic memories: an emotional binding account

Abstract: Emotional events are remembered better than neutral events, and this emotion advantage becomes particularly pronounced over time. The time dependent effects of emotion impact recollection rather than familiarity-based recognition, and they influence recollection of item-specific details rather than contextual details. Moreover, the amygdala, but not the hippocampus, is critical in producing these effects. Time-dependent effects of emotion have been attributed to an emotional consolidation process whereby the a… Show more

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Cited by 267 publications
(291 citation statements)
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References 126 publications
(146 reference statements)
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“…To predict emotion, people also rely on memories of how they felt in similar circumstances in the past [12]. The most accessible memories often concern experiences that were particularly emotionally intense [13]. Basing predictions these unrepresentative memories can lead to overestimating future emotion [14].…”
Section: Similar Sources and Patterns Of Bias When Predicting And Remmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…To predict emotion, people also rely on memories of how they felt in similar circumstances in the past [12]. The most accessible memories often concern experiences that were particularly emotionally intense [13]. Basing predictions these unrepresentative memories can lead to overestimating future emotion [14].…”
Section: Similar Sources and Patterns Of Bias When Predicting And Remmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When experiencing intense emotion, attention narrows to central or salient features of events at the expense of more peripheral features [13]. Thus, the features of events that come to mind when people are predicting or remembering emotion are also likely to be salient when people are experiencing the peak intensity of emotion, promoting accuracy.…”
Section: Similar Sources and Patterns Of Bias When Predicting And Remmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…People have superior memory for emotional events relative to neutral ones, with emotional memories being significantly less likely to be forgotten over time [60]. Emotional memory is impaired following lesions to the medial temporal lobes that encompass the amygdala, hippocampus, and perirhinal cortex [61,62].…”
Section: Mapping the Four Component Abilities Of Eimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This pattern would be especially expected when recognition is tested for the solution word alone (Experiment 2). However, recollection does depend on remembering some details about the encoding episode (Gardiner, Ramponi, & Richardson-Klavehn, 1998), for which relational encoding is especially important (Yonelinas & Ritchey, 2015). Moreover, emotional arousal during stimulus encoding has specifically been reported to enhance recollection (Anderson, Yamaguchi, Grabski, & Lacka, 2006;Yonelinas & Ritchey, 2015).…”
Section: Hypothesesmentioning
confidence: 99%