Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7285032 | Cognition | 2018 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
The joint impact of emotion and production on conversational memory was examined in two experiments where pairs of participants took turns producing verbal information. They were instructed to produce out loud sentences based on either neutral or emotional (Experiment 1: negative; Experiment 2: positive) words. Each participant was then asked to recall as many words as possible (content memory) and to indicate who had produced each word (reality monitoring). The analyses showed that both self-production and emotion boost content memory, although emotion also impairs reality monitoring. This study sheds light on how both factors (emotion and production) may constrain language interaction memory through information saliency.
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Authors
Ludovic Le Bigot, Dominique Knutsen, Sandrine Gil,