Article
Neurosciences
Caitlin Hilverman, Melissa C. Duff
Summary: Object naming involves accessing meaning and retrieving word form from remote semantic memory. Recent studies challenge the view that remote semantic memory is hippocampus-independent, suggesting that hippocampus may play a long-term role in semantic memory processes and disruption in hippocampus can impair object naming. Amnesic patients showed lower performance in naming objects compared to healthy participants, especially for less familiar, visually complex, and less agreed upon words.
Article
Neurosciences
Carla Iorio, Francesca Pacitti, Alessandro Rossi, Paola Iorio, Assunta Pompili
Summary: Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD) is a specific subtype of Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) characterized by a seasonal pattern. This study aimed to investigate the cognitive processing of emotional stimuli in women with SAD, and found impaired declarative memory and attentional bias for negative emotional stimuli in SAD patients.
Article
Psychology, Multidisciplinary
Yoonji Kim, Diana Van Lancker Sidtis, John J. Sidtis
Summary: Recent studies show that verbal details are retained in memory and emotion enhances memory. Sentences with emotional nuance are remembered better.
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY
(2021)
Article
Behavioral Sciences
Kylee Tamera, Courtney Kannampuzha, Viviane Ta, Pascal Hot, Patrick S. R. Davidson
Summary: Older adults tend to be more positive and have a stronger tendency to remember positive information, but the link between their positive mood and positive memory bias has not been explored. This study manipulated the mood of young and older adults and found that mood manipulation influenced older adults' emotional memory bias to some extent.
FRONTIERS IN BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE
(2022)
Article
Medicine, General & Internal
Mohamad El Haj, Andre Ndobo, Ahmed A. Moustafa, Philippe Allain
Summary: We investigated destination memory in Korsakoff's syndrome, specifically the ability to remember who information was transmitted to. We found that patients with KS had lower recognition of neutral, emotionally positive, and emotionally negative destinations compared to control participants. They also had lower recognition of emotionally negative destinations compared to emotionally positive or neutral destinations. Our study suggests a compromised ability to process negative destinations in KS and highlights the relationship between memory decline and impaired emotional processing in this syndrome.
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE
(2023)
Article
Geriatrics & Gerontology
Martin J. Sliwinski, Sara Freed, Stacey B. Scott, Giancarlo Pasquini, Joshua M. Smyth
Summary: The study found that high levels of chronic stress attenuate the favorable age gradients on well-being, leading to older age no longer being associated with more favorable levels of well-being. Individual differences in health limitations have an impact on the relationship between age and well-being.
JOURNALS OF GERONTOLOGY SERIES B-PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND SOCIAL SCIENCES
(2021)
Article
Psychology, Experimental
Charlotte Stewardson, Michelle C. Hunsche, Victoria Wardell, Daniela J. Palombo, Connor M. Kerns
Summary: Negative emotion enhances item memory but may reduce associative memory. Social information enhances memory, but the interaction between social and emotional cues on memory is still unclear. Furthermore, gender differences exist, with women showing better associative memory performance compared to men.
Review
Psychology, Multidisciplinary
Tse Yen Tan, Louise Wachsmuth, Michele M. Tugade
Summary: This review focuses on positive emotional granularity, specifically emphasizing the lack of research in this area compared to negative emotional granularity. It highlights how positive emotions can motivate individuals to broaden their cognition, attention, and behavior, and suggests that distinct positive emotion concepts provide more informational value. Individuals with higher positive emotional granularity report better coping with stress.
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY
(2022)
Article
Psychology, Multidisciplinary
Reyhan Tunc, Simay Ikier
Summary: Aging is associated with declines in attention, leading to an increase in inattentional blindness. Older adults show greater inattentional blindness, especially towards negative stimuli. However, they are more likely to detect positive stimuli, indicating an age-related positivity effect. These findings highlight the role of emotional and motivational changes in older age, and suggest that higher inattentional blindness for older adults cannot solely be attributed to reductions in attentional capacity.
CURRENT PSYCHOLOGY
(2023)
Article
Neurosciences
Caterina Padulo, Erika Marascia, Nadia Conte, Noemi Passarello, Laura Mandolesi, Beth Fairfield
Summary: The study found that curiosity enhances memory for both target and incidental information. Interestingly, the valence of facial images did not affect memory during states of curiosity, indicating that processes associated with curiosity boost memory for incidental information regardless of valence.
Article
Psychology, Multidisciplinary
Gabrielle C. Veloso, Welison Evenston G. Ty
Summary: The study showed that participants who underwent emotional working memory training had significantly lower trait anxiety levels post-training. Emotion regulation was not found to mediate the relationship between working memory training and trait anxiety reduction.
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY
(2021)
Article
Behavioral Sciences
Valerio Santangelo, Tiziana Pedale, Paola Colucci, Giovanni Giulietti, Simone Macri, Patrizia Campolongo
Summary: While many studies have shown that aging is associated with cognitive decline in the general population, little is known about this association in elderly individuals with enhanced memory capabilities. A 75-year-old individual with highly superior autobiographical memory (HSAM) showed no signs of memory decline over a five-year period, suggesting that highly superior memory performance can occur without noticeable physiological aging.
Article
Behavioral Sciences
Lauren E. DiFazio, David S. Reis, Joseph R. Manns
Summary: The study used optogenetic stimulation in the basolateral complex of the amygdala to investigate its role in modulating memory during object-context associations learning in rats. The results showed that stimulation following correct choices accelerated memory acquisition, but not during the intertrial interval. This provides further evidence of amygdala-mediated memory enhancement and offers insights for future research on its modulation of object-context associative memory.
BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE
(2021)
Article
Psychology, Multidisciplinary
Huifang Yang, Junqing Li, Xifu Zheng
Summary: The study found that negative emotions interfered with spatial working memory, and both high and low anxiety groups showed task-related changes in LPP and slow waves. Additionally, participants with high trait anxiety exhibited opposite neural responses to verbal and spatial working memory tasks compared to those with low trait anxiety when processing negative or neutral pictures.
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY
(2021)
Article
Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
Mingqi Fu, Jing Guo, Xi Chen, Boxun Han, Farooq Ahmed, Muhammad Shahid, Qilin Zhang
Summary: This study investigates the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the emotional well-being of older adults. The results show that there is heterogeneity in vulnerability among different groups, and vulnerability is related to emotional responses. Additionally, aging attitudes moderate the relationship between vulnerability and emotions.
FRONTIERS IN PUBLIC HEALTH
(2022)
Article
Psychology, Clinical
Clayton D. Hinkle, James N. Porter, Eric J. Waldron, Hannah Klein, Daniel Tranel, Amy Heffelfinger
CLINICAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGIST
(2017)
Article
Psychology, Clinical
Amanda M. Ward, Matthew Calamia, Erin Thiemann, Jamie Dunlap, Daniel Tranel
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGY
(2017)
Article
Neurosciences
Alaine E. Reschke-Hernandez, Katrina L. Okerstrom, Angela Bowles Edwards, Daniel Tranel
JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE RESEARCH
(2017)
Editorial Material
Multidisciplinary Sciences
Ralph Adolphs, Jan Glaescher, Daniel Tranel
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
(2018)
Article
Psychology, Clinical
Molly Z. Meth, John P. K. Bernstein, Matthew Calamia, Daniel Tranel
CLINICAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGIST
(2019)
Article
Behavioral Sciences
Joseph Barrash, Donald T. Stuss, Nazan Aksan, Steven W. Anderson, Robert D. Jones, Kenneth Manzel, Daniel Tranel
Article
Behavioral Sciences
Janina Kamm, Laura L. Boles Ponto, Ken Manzel, Owen J. Gaasedelen, Yasunori Nagahama, Taylor Abel, Daniel Tranel
EPILEPSY & BEHAVIOR
(2018)
Article
Neurosciences
Kelsey N. Spalding, Margaret L. Schlichting, Dagmar Zeithamova, Alison R. Preston, Daniel Tranel, Melissa C. Duff, David E. Warren
JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
(2018)
Article
Behavioral Sciences
Adam Zeman, Marcus Byruck, Peter Tallis, Keith Vossel, Daniel Tranel
Article
Behavioral Sciences
C. Daryl Cameron, Justin Reber, Victoria L. Spring, Daniel Tranel
Article
Behavioral Sciences
Matthew Calamia, Kristian E. Markon, Matthew J. Sutterer, Daniel Tranel
Article
Psychology, Clinical
Mark D. Bowren, Katie E. Croft, Justin Reber, Daniel Tranel
Article
Clinical Neurology
Janelle N. Beadle, Sergio Paradiso, Daniel Tranel
FRONTIERS IN NEUROLOGY
(2018)
Article
Audiology & Speech-Language Pathology
Amy M. Belfi, Anna Kasdan, Daniel Tranel
Article
Psychology, Clinical
Scott O. Lilienfeld, Katheryn C. Sauvigne, Justin Reber, Ashley L. Watts, Stephan Hamann, Sarah Francis Smith, Christopher J. Patrick, Shauna M. Bowes, Daniel Tranel
PERSONALITY DISORDERS-THEORY RESEARCH AND TREATMENT
(2018)