Can semantic relatedness explain the enhancement of memory for emotional words?
about
Emotion regulation, attention to emotion, and the ventral attentional networkBirth of the cool: a two-centuries decline in emotional expression in Anglophone fictionA Moist Crevice for Word Aversion: In Semantics Not SoundsEmotional memory in schizophrenia.Effects of emotion on item and source memory in young and older adults.Increased attention and memory for beloved-related information during infatuation: behavioral and electrophysiological data.Cognitive neuroscience of emotional memory.Taboo, emotionally valenced, and emotionally neutral word norms.Phenomenological characteristics of emotional memories in younger and older adultsThe effects of valence and arousal on the neural activity leading to subsequent memory.How emotion leads to selective memory: neuroimaging evidenceEvery scientist is a memory researcher: Suggestions for making research more memorable.Effects of emotion and age on performance during a think/no-think memory task.Emotional memories are not all created equal: evidence for selective memory enhancement.Recall dynamics reveal the retrieval of emotional context.Ageing and autobiographical memory for emotional and neutral events.Affective recognition memory processing and event-related brain potentials.The processing of inter-item relations as a moderating factor of retrieval-induced forgetting.Emotional enhancement of immediate memory: Positive pictorial stimuli are better recognized than neutral or negative pictorial stimuli.Youth are more Vulnerable to False Memories than Middle-Aged Adults due to Liberal Response BiasRelation between emotional face memory and social anhedonia in schizophrenia.Disrupted functional connectivity in adolescent obesity.Remembering the Details: Effects of EmotionWhat factors need to be considered to understand emotional memories?Affective processing in bilingual speakers: disembodied cognition?Affective processing within 1/10th of a second: High arousal is necessary for early facilitative processing of negative but not positive words.Aging and recognition memory for emotional words: a bias account.The word concreteness effect occurs for positive, but not negative, emotion words in immediate serial recall.Emotionally negative pictures enhance gist memory.The emotional memory effect: differential processing or item distinctiveness?Source monitoring is not always enhanced for valenced material.Norms of valence and arousal for 14,031 Spanish words.Effect of emotion on memory for words and their context.Spanish norms for affective and lexico-semantic variables for 1,400 words.On the roles of distinctiveness and semantic expectancies in episodic encoding of emotional words.Memory for emotional words: The role of semantic relatedness, encoding task and affective valence.Memory for emotional words in sentences: the importance of emotional contrast.Voluntary explicit versus involuntary conceptual memory are associated with dissociable fMRI responses in hippocampus, amygdala, and parietal cortex for emotional and neutral word pairs.The role of attention in emotional memory enhancement in pathological and healthy aging.Memory bias for negative emotional words in recognition memory is driven by effects of category membership.
P2860
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P2860
Can semantic relatedness explain the enhancement of memory for emotional words?
description
2004 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2004年の論文
@ja
2004年論文
@yue
2004年論文
@zh-hant
2004年論文
@zh-hk
2004年論文
@zh-mo
2004年論文
@zh-tw
2004年论文
@wuu
2004年论文
@zh
2004年论文
@zh-cn
name
Can semantic relatedness explain the enhancement of memory for emotional words?
@en
type
label
Can semantic relatedness explain the enhancement of memory for emotional words?
@en
prefLabel
Can semantic relatedness explain the enhancement of memory for emotional words?
@en
P2860
P356
P1433
P1476
Can semantic relatedness explain the enhancement of memory for emotional words?
@en
P2093
Deborah Talmi
Morris Moscovitch
P2860
P2888
P304
P356
10.3758/BF03195864
P577
2004-07-01T00:00:00Z
P5875
P6179
1024146354