Author:
Kim Yoonji,Sidtis Diana Van Lancker,Sidtis John J.
Abstract
Recent studies have demonstrated that details of verbal material are retained in memory. Further, converging evidence points to a memory-enhancing effect of emotion such that memory for emotional events is stronger than memory for neutral events. Building upon this work, it appears likely that verbatim sentence forms will be remembered better when tinged with emotional nuance. Most previous studies have focused on single words. The current study examines the role of emotional nuance in the verbatim retention of longer sentences in written material. In this study, participants silently read transcriptions of spontaneous narratives, half of which had been delivered within a context of emotional expression and the other half with neutral expression. Transcripts were taken from selected narratives that received the highest, most extreme ratings, neutral or emotional. Participants identified written excerpts in a yes/no recognition test. Results revealed that participants’ verbatim memory was significantly greater for excerpts from emotionally nuanced narratives than from neutral narratives. It is concluded that the narratives, pre-rated as emotional or neutral, drove this effect of emotion on verbatim retention. These findings expand a growing body of evidence for a role of emotion in memory, and lend support to episodic theories of language and the constructionist account.
Funder
National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders
Reference89 articles.
1. Neural correlates of the automatic processing of threat facial signals.;Anderson;J. Neurosci.,2003
2. Event-related brain responses to emotional words, pictures, and faces – a cross-domain comparison.;Bayer;Front. Psychol.,2014
3. Remembering prosody in discourse: verbatim memory and regeneration;Bellik;Paper Presented at CUNY 2019 32nd Annual CUNY Conference on Human Sentence Processing.,2019
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献