TY - JOUR
T1 - The impact of stress on neutral and emotional aspects of episodic memory
AU - Payne, Jessica D.
AU - Jackson, Eric D.
AU - Ryan, Lee
AU - Hoscheidt, Siobhan
AU - Jacobs, W. Jake
AU - Nadel, Lynn
N1 - Funding Information:
Correspondence should be addressed to Jessica D. Payne, University of Arizona, Department of Psychology, Tucson, AZ 85721, USA. Email: [email protected] The research reported here was supported by research grants from the McDonnell-Pew Program in Cognitive Neuroscience to WJJ and from the McDonnell-Pew Program and the Flinn Foundation to the Cognitive Neuroscience Program at the University of Arizona. We thank Linda Jarrell and Marie Osborne for their skilful assistance in conducting this research.
PY - 2006/1
Y1 - 2006/1
N2 - The present experiment demonstrates that exposure to a significant psychological stressor (administered before watching a slide show) preserves or even enhances memory for emotional aspects of an event, and simultaneously disrupts memory for non-emotional aspects of the same event. Stress exposure also disrupted memory for information that was visually and thematically central to the event depicted in the slide show. Memory for peripheral information, on the other hand, was unaffected by stress. These results are consistent with theories invoking differential effects of stress on brain systems responsible for encoding and retrieving emotional memories (the amygdala) and non-emotional memories (e.g., the hippocampal formation), and inconsistent with the view that memories formed under high levels of stress are qualitatively the same as those formed under ordinary emotional circumstances. These data, which are also consistent with results obtained in a number of studies using animals and humans, have implications for the traumatic memory debate and theories regarding human memory.
AB - The present experiment demonstrates that exposure to a significant psychological stressor (administered before watching a slide show) preserves or even enhances memory for emotional aspects of an event, and simultaneously disrupts memory for non-emotional aspects of the same event. Stress exposure also disrupted memory for information that was visually and thematically central to the event depicted in the slide show. Memory for peripheral information, on the other hand, was unaffected by stress. These results are consistent with theories invoking differential effects of stress on brain systems responsible for encoding and retrieving emotional memories (the amygdala) and non-emotional memories (e.g., the hippocampal formation), and inconsistent with the view that memories formed under high levels of stress are qualitatively the same as those formed under ordinary emotional circumstances. These data, which are also consistent with results obtained in a number of studies using animals and humans, have implications for the traumatic memory debate and theories regarding human memory.
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U2 - 10.1080/09658210500139176
DO - 10.1080/09658210500139176
M3 - Article
C2 - 16423737
AN - SCOPUS:31744435144
SN - 0965-8211
VL - 14
SP - 1
EP - 16
JO - Memory
JF - Memory
IS - 1
ER -