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  1. Mood-dependent retrieval in visual long-term memory: dissociable effects on retrieval probability and mnemonic precision.Weizhen Xie & Weiwei Zhang - 2017 - Cognition and Emotion 32 (4):674-690.
    Although memories are more retrievable if observers’ emotional states are consistent between encoding and retrieval, it is unclear whether the consistency of emotional states increases the likelihood of successful memory retrieval, the precision of retrieved memories, or both. The present study tested visual long-term memory for everyday objects while consistent or inconsistent emotional contexts between encoding and retrieval were induced using background grey-scale images from the International Affective Picture System. In the study phase, participants remembered colours of sequentially presented objects (...)
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  • Retrieval-induced forgetting of emotional memories.Crystal Reeck & Kevin S. LaBar - 2024 - Cognition and Emotion 38 (1):131-147.
    Long-term memory manages its contents to facilitate adaptive behaviour, amplifying representations of information relevant to current goals and expediting forgetting of information that competes with relevant memory traces. Both mnemonic selection and inhibition maintain congruence between the contents of long-term memory and an organism’s priorities. However, the capacity of these processes to modulate affective mnemonic representations remains ambiguous. Three empirical experiments investigated the consequences of mnemonic selection and inhibition on affectively charged and neutral mnemonic representations using an adapted retrieval practice (...)
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  • Retrieval-Induced Forgetting as Motivated Cognition.Gennaro Pica, Marina Chernikova, Antonio Pierro, Anna Maria Giannini & Arie W. Kruglanski - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  • Testing emotional memories: does negative emotional significance influence the benefit received from testing?Kathrin J. Emmerdinger, Christof Kuhbandner & Franziska Berchtold - 2017 - Cognition and Emotion 32 (4):852-859.
    A large body of research shows that emotionally significant stimuli are better stored in memory. One question that has received much less attention is how emotional memories are influenced by factors that influence memories after the initial encoding of stimuli. Intriguingly, several recent studies suggest that post-encoding factors do not differ in their effects on emotional and neutral memories. However, to date, only detrimental factors have been addressed. In the present study, we examined whether emotionally negative memories are differentially influenced (...)
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