Declarative memory retention and emotional stimuli. A study of an Italian sample

Psychological and pharmacological studies in humans suggest that emotional arousal enhances long-term memory. In this paper we used, in an Italian sample, an adaptation of a paradigm previously utilized in American samples to study the relationship between emotion and long-term memory. Seventy-two h...

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Veröffentlicht in:Functional neurology 2005-10, Vol.20 (4), p.157-162
Hauptverfasser: Gasbarri, Antonella, Pompili, Assunta, Arnone, Benedetto, d'Onofrio, Armida, Marchetti, Arianna, Tavares, Maria Clotilde, Tomaz, Carlos
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container_end_page 162
container_issue 4
container_start_page 157
container_title Functional neurology
container_volume 20
creator Gasbarri, Antonella
Pompili, Assunta
Arnone, Benedetto
d'Onofrio, Armida
Marchetti, Arianna
Tavares, Maria Clotilde
Tomaz, Carlos
description Psychological and pharmacological studies in humans suggest that emotional arousal enhances long-term memory. In this paper we used, in an Italian sample, an adaptation of a paradigm previously utilized in American samples to study the relationship between emotion and long-term memory. Seventy-two healthy adults from different educational backgrounds were randomly assigned either to a neutral group or to an emotional arousal group and then told a short story, presented audio-visually. In both groups, the slides shown and the slide sequence were the same, and the images were accompanied by a narrative. The two versions of the story differed primarily in their emotional content. Shortly after viewing the slide presentation, the participants were asked to rate the emotionality of the narrative, and ten days later were submitted to a retention test. The emotionally-arousing version of the story was rated as more emotional than the neutral one. Compared with the members of the neutral group, the subjects in the arousal group recalled a significantly higher number of elements from the story. There was no overall difference between the two groups in performance on the recognition memory test. These results confirm that the emotional content of stimuli enhances long-term declarative memory of those stimuli, and indicate the possible usefulness of applying the paradigm utilized in this study to different clinical samples from various cultural backgrounds.
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subjects Adolescent
Adult
Arousal
Cognition - physiology
Cross-Cultural Comparison
Emotions - physiology
Female
Humans
Italy
Male
Memory - physiology
Mental Recall - physiology
Middle Aged
Recognition (Psychology)
title Declarative memory retention and emotional stimuli. A study of an Italian sample
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