Are Real Moods Required to Reveal Mood-Congruent and Mood-Dependent Memory?

While simulating, or acting as if, they were either happy or sad, university students recounted emotionally itive, neutral, or negative events from their personal past. Two days later, subjects were asked to freely recall the gist of all of these events, and they did so while simulating a mood that...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychological science 2000-05, Vol.11 (3), p.244-248
Hauptverfasser: Eich, Eric, Macaulay, Dawn
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container_title Psychological science
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creator Eich, Eric
Macaulay, Dawn
description While simulating, or acting as if, they were either happy or sad, university students recounted emotionally itive, neutral, or negative events from their personal past. Two days later, subjects were asked to freely recall the gist of all of these events, and they did so while simulating a mood that either did or did not match the one they had feigned before. By comparing the present results with those of a previous study, in which affectively realistic and subjectively convincing states of happiness and sadness had been engendered experimentally, we searched for--and found--striking differences between simulated and actual moods in their impact on autobiographical memory. In particular, it appears that the mood-congruent effects elicited by simulated moods are qualitatively different from those evoked by induced moods, and that only authentic affects have the power to produce mood-dependent effects.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/1467-9280.00249
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source MEDLINE; SAGE Complete; EBSCOhost Business Source Complete; Jstor Complete Legacy
subjects Adult
Affect
Association Learning
Autobiographical memory
Cognition
College students
Emotion
Emotional states
Emotions
Female
Happiness
Humans
Life Change Events
Male
Memory
Memory recall
Mental Recall
Negative events
Pleasure
Positive life events
Power
Reaction Time
Sadness
Social cognition
Summarization
title Are Real Moods Required to Reveal Mood-Congruent and Mood-Dependent Memory?
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