This study tested the hypothesis that affective content may undermine rather than facilitate working memory (WM) performance. To this end, participants performed a running WM task with positive, negative and neutral words. In typical running memory tasks, participants are presented with lists of unpredictable length and are asked to recall the last three or four items. We found that accuracy with affective words decreased as lists lengthened, whereas list length did not influence recall of neutral words. We interpreted this pattern of results in terms of a limited resource model of WM in which valence represents additional information that needs to be manipulated, especially in the context of difficult trials.
Running with emotion: when affective content hampers working memory performance
FAIRFIELD, Beth;MAMMARELLA, Nicola
;DI DOMENICO, ALBERTO;PALUMBO, ROCCO
2015-01-01
Abstract
This study tested the hypothesis that affective content may undermine rather than facilitate working memory (WM) performance. To this end, participants performed a running WM task with positive, negative and neutral words. In typical running memory tasks, participants are presented with lists of unpredictable length and are asked to recall the last three or four items. We found that accuracy with affective words decreased as lists lengthened, whereas list length did not influence recall of neutral words. We interpreted this pattern of results in terms of a limited resource model of WM in which valence represents additional information that needs to be manipulated, especially in the context of difficult trials.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
---|---|---|---|
Fairfield_et_al-2015-International_Journal_of_Psychology.pdf
Solo gestori archivio
Descrizione: Brief Research Report
Tipologia:
PDF editoriale
Dimensione
110.75 kB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
110.75 kB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri Richiedi una copia |
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.