Effects of facial expression on working memory
(2016) In International Journal of Psychology 51(4). p.312-317- Abstract
- In long-term memory (LTM) emotional content may both enhance and impair memory, however, disagreement remains whether emotional content exerts different effects on the ability to maintain and manipulate information over short intervals. Using a working-memory (WM) recognition task requiring the monitoring of faces displaying facial expressions of emotion, participants judged each face as identical (target) or not (non-target) to that presented 2 trials back (2-back). Negative expression was better and faster recognised, illustrated by higher target discriminability and target detection. Positive and negative expressions also induced a more liberal detection bias compared with neutral. Taking the preceding item into account, additional... (More)
- In long-term memory (LTM) emotional content may both enhance and impair memory, however, disagreement remains whether emotional content exerts different effects on the ability to maintain and manipulate information over short intervals. Using a working-memory (WM) recognition task requiring the monitoring of faces displaying facial expressions of emotion, participants judged each face as identical (target) or not (non-target) to that presented 2 trials back (2-back). Negative expression was better and faster recognised, illustrated by higher target discriminability and target detection. Positive and negative expressions also induced a more liberal detection bias compared with neutral. Taking the preceding item into account, additional accuracy impairment (negative preceding negative target) and enhancement effects (negative or positive preceding neutral target) appeared. This illustrates a differential modulation of WM based on the affective tone of the target (mirroring LTM enhancement- and recognition bias effects), and of the preceding item (enhanced and impaired target detection). (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/7854324
- author
- Stiernströmer, Emelie LU ; Wolgast, Martin LU and Johansson, Mikael LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2016-08-01
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- Recognition bias, Emotion-induced impairment, Emotion-induced enhancement, Facial expression, Two-back
- in
- International Journal of Psychology
- volume
- 51
- issue
- 4
- pages
- 6 pages
- publisher
- Psychology Press
- external identifiers
-
- pmid:26238683
- pmid:26238683
- wos:000379816400010
- scopus:85028240664
- ISSN
- 1464-066X
- DOI
- 10.1002/ijop.12194
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 1ac32d9b-122f-452f-a4e7-5c83551031b5 (old id 7854324)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-01 10:07:31
- date last changed
- 2022-03-08 19:30:14
@article{1ac32d9b-122f-452f-a4e7-5c83551031b5, abstract = {{In long-term memory (LTM) emotional content may both enhance and impair memory, however, disagreement remains whether emotional content exerts different effects on the ability to maintain and manipulate information over short intervals. Using a working-memory (WM) recognition task requiring the monitoring of faces displaying facial expressions of emotion, participants judged each face as identical (target) or not (non-target) to that presented 2 trials back (2-back). Negative expression was better and faster recognised, illustrated by higher target discriminability and target detection. Positive and negative expressions also induced a more liberal detection bias compared with neutral. Taking the preceding item into account, additional accuracy impairment (negative preceding negative target) and enhancement effects (negative or positive preceding neutral target) appeared. This illustrates a differential modulation of WM based on the affective tone of the target (mirroring LTM enhancement- and recognition bias effects), and of the preceding item (enhanced and impaired target detection).}}, author = {{Stiernströmer, Emelie and Wolgast, Martin and Johansson, Mikael}}, issn = {{1464-066X}}, keywords = {{Recognition bias; Emotion-induced impairment; Emotion-induced enhancement; Facial expression; Two-back}}, language = {{eng}}, month = {{08}}, number = {{4}}, pages = {{312--317}}, publisher = {{Psychology Press}}, series = {{International Journal of Psychology}}, title = {{Effects of facial expression on working memory}}, url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ijop.12194}}, doi = {{10.1002/ijop.12194}}, volume = {{51}}, year = {{2016}}, }