Author:
Legrand Nicolas,Etard Olivier,Vandevelde Anaïs,Pierre Mélissa,Viader Fausto,Clochon Patrice,Doidy Franck,Peschanski Denis,Eustache Francis,Gagnepain Pierre
Abstract
AbstractEffort to suppress past experiences from conscious awareness can lead to forgetting. It remains largely unknown whether emotions, including their physiological causes, are also impacted by such memory suppression. In two studies, we measured in healthy participants the aftereffect of suppressing negative memories on cardiac response. Results of Study 1 revealed that an efficient control of memories was associated with a long-term inhibition of the cardiac deceleration normally induced by disgusting stimuli. Attempts to suppress sad memories, on the opposite, aggravated cardiac response, an effect that was largely related to the inability to forget this specific material. In Study 2, we found using electroencephalography that a prominent neural marker of inhibitory control, a suppression of the 5-9 Hz frequency band, was related to the subsequent inhibition of the cardiac response. These results demonstrate that suppressing memories also influence the cardiac system, opening new avenues for treating intrusive memories.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
3 articles.
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