Title of article :
Emotional memory enhancement in respect of positive visual stimuli in Alzheimerʹs disease emerges after rich and deep encoding
Author/Authors :
Sava، نويسنده , , Alina-Alexandra and Paquet، نويسنده , , Claire and Krolak-Salmon، نويسنده , , Pierre and Dumurgier، نويسنده , , Julien and Hugon، نويسنده , , Jacques and Chainay، نويسنده , , Hanna، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2015
Pages :
13
From page :
89
To page :
101
Abstract :
Healthy participants remember emotional stimuli better than neutral stimuli. In normal, older adults this emotional enhancement of memory (EEM) was mostly seen in respect of positive stimuli (positivity bias) after rich and deep encoding. The results relating to this effect in Alzheimerʹs disease (AD) patients are fairly inconsistent. The goal of the present study was to ascertain whether EEM in AD patients depends on the depth and the richness of encoding. Twenty-one patients with mild-to-moderate AD and 23 age-and-education-matched controls completed two study phases, each followed by a retrieval phase. The first study phase consisted of a natural/man-made categorization task followed by a recognition task, whereas the second, which involved the stimuli used in the recognition task, allowed for richer and deeper encoding as a result of repetition and naming of the stimuli and presentation of the same semantic cues at encoding and retrieval. The second study phase was followed by free and cued recall tasks and a recognition task. After the first study phase we observed EEM in respect of negative and positive stimuli in controls, but not in AD patients. After the second study phase, the positivity bias was observed in the free recall task in controls but not in AD patients. In the cued recall and recognition tasks, however, both groups showed the positivity bias. Based on our results, AD patients present a positivity memory bias when encoding is sufficiently rich and deep, and when support is provided at the time of retrieval (cued recall or recognition tasks).
Keywords :
Deep encoding , Cued recall , emotion , Memory , Alzheimerיs disease , Positivity memory effect
Journal title :
Cortex
Serial Year :
2015
Journal title :
Cortex
Record number :
2302223
Link To Document :
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