期刊论文详细信息
Frontiers in Psychology
Motivation Matters: Differing Effects of Pre-goal and Post-goal Emotions on Attention and Memory
Linda J. Levine1  Robin L. Kaplan1  Ilse eVan Damme2 
[1] University of California, Irvine;University of Leuven;
关键词: Arousal;    Emotions;    Motivation;    emotion;    Goal relevance;    Memory narrowing;   
DOI  :  10.3389/fpsyg.2012.00404
来源: DOAJ
【 摘 要 】

People often show enhanced memory for information that is central to emotional events and impaired memory for peripheral details. The intensity of arousal elicited by an emotional event is commonly held to be the mechanism underlying memory narrowing, with the implication that all sources of emotional arousal should have comparable effects. Discrete emotions differ in their effects on memory, however, with some emotions broadening rather than narrowing the range of information attended to and remembered. Thus, features of emotion other than arousal appear to play a critical role in memory narrowing. We review theory and research on emotional memory narrowing and argue that motivation matters. Recent evidence suggests that emotions experienced prior to goal attainment or loss lead to memory narrowing whereas emotions experienced after goal attainment or loss broaden the range of information encoded in memory. The motivational component of emotion is an important but understudied feature that can help to clarify the conditions under which emotions enhance and impair attention and memory.

【 授权许可】

Unknown   

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