Zajonc, R. B. (1968). Attitudinal effects of mere exposure. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 9, 1-27. 301
Appendix 2.1. IAPS numbers for the picture stimuli Positive pictures list A: 1419, 1440, 1590, 1601, 1720, 1722, 1750, 1811, 2050, 2080, 2092, 2352, 2510, 5270, 5450, 5626, 5890, 7230, 7250, 7390, 7502, 8116, 8161, 8162, 8190, 8220, 8380, 8490, 8496, 8503 Positive pictures list B: 1460, 1500, 1540, 1620, 1650, 1710, 1740, 1810, 1920, 2209, 2655, 5300, 5460, 5480, 5600, 5623, 5629, 5849, 5994, 7195, 7325, 7580, 8021, 8041, 8090, 8180, 8200, 8210, 8260, 8531 Neutral pictures list A: 1112, 1121, 1321, 1726, 1931, 1945, 1947, 2220, 2372, 2441, 2487, 2690, 2702, 3550, 4274, 5395, 5532, 5535, 5661, 6000, 6900, 7037, 7496, 7503, 7550, 7590, 7640, 8211, 9472, 9913 Neutral pictures list B: 1230, 1303, 1310, 1313, 1616, 1935, 2272, 2410, 2575, 2595, 2635, 2695, 2749, 2780, 5920, 7095, 7096, 7402, 7504, 7600, 7620, 7830, 7920, 8160, 8232, 8475, 9080, 9171, 9401, 9411 Negative pictures list A: 1220, 2120, 2141, 2205, 2312, 2455, 2590, 2800, 3220, 3280, 6010, 6200, 6211, 6312, 6571, 6940, 7360, 9001, 9101, 9120, 9290, 9320, 9390, 9415, 9480, 9561, 9592, 9621, 9830, 9910 Negative pictures list B: 1090, 1274, 2490, 2692, 2700, 2710, 2715, 3022, 6213, 6838, 8230, 8480, 9000, 9010, 9042, 9090, 9190, 9280, 9331, 9373, 9400, 9404, 9430, 9470, 9471, 9520, 9530, 9560, 9600, 9611 302
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THE EMOTIONAL ENHANCEMENT OF MEMORY
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the memory effects. Surprisingly, t
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and motivation was waning. Most imp
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Meta-analysis: Experiments 6-10…
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negative, neutral or positive objec
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Figure 6.2. Summary of findings fro
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Table 3.5. Criteria for giving resp
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avoidance task ………………
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loved one could block their ability
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eport, physiological response and c
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Section 1.2. What effects do emotio
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due to external influences. In cont
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of naturally occurring emotions or
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ecause mood inductions generally re
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(e.g. Conway et al., 1994). Memory
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alternatives (Lockhart, 2000). The
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equired participants to distinguish
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een found when memory is assessed b
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peripheral elements of emotional an
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processing of the specific content
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failure to retrieve episodic memori
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effects on cognitive processes, eve
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ecollection and familiarity within
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emotional influence on memory. In t
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year (Dolcos et al., 2005). There a
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e suitable for investigating memory
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possible that having to distinguish
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of photographs of people, animals a
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Retrieval phase: Participants then
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y the ANOVA’s. These are only rep
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Table 2.1: Experiments 1 and 2: Res
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In these experiments the influence
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We found evidence of recognition me
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For the recognition test, which was
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Section 5. Experiments 2A and 2B: P
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items that had been seen previously
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Section 7. Experiment 2E: Recogniti
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Table 2.2. Experiment 2: Results of
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For the ‘know’ responses the ma
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Section 8. Experiment 2 - General D
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Presentation of stimuli in blocked
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It is possible that the act of maki
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enhancement can be influenced by re
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levels of memory between the positi
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the performance of any subsequent t
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experiment to provide a set of targ
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Experimental stimuli were presented
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Recognition performance in all thre
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Analysis of RKG responses We analys
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Further signal detection analysis o
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stimuli, which corresponded with mo
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could be generalised to the real-wo
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paradigm was first introduced by Tu
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The nature of recognition memory an
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The relation between Remember/Know/
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We proposed that a Remember respons
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to either the RKN or SSN memory tas
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change in a dimension (e.g., a ligh
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were prompted to indicate by key pr
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When you think the picture was not
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conducted to further analyse the ma
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interactions in the ANOVAs were fou
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Table 3.9. Same/Similar/New task: N
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Orthogonal contrasts revealed that
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Table 3.11. Remember/Know/New task:
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suitable responses were not equable
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We found that more ‘remember’ r
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say that context is easier to remem
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Levine & Bluck, 2004; Storbeck & Cl
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Figure 4.1. Examples of pairs of ne
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Familiarity i) Word frequency and w
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were not sure if there was going to
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Table 4.1. Experiment 5: Proportion
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memory for positive stimuli. These
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whether visual specificity for posi
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Figure 4.3. Examples of stimuli. St
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0.59 (-1.65 to 2.55; 0.98) respecti
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Section 3.3. Results The data for t
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Figure 4.4. Mean average specific a
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The possibility of a response bias
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Section 4. Experiment 7: Biases in
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of an attentional encoding explanat
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esults will be found as for Experim
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of one second was displayed before
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Table 4.3. Mean responses (SE) for
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greater recognition for the objects
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Table 4.4. Mean average (SE) number
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eveal a significantly longer total
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difference between scenes with a ne
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of memory for positive objects was
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independent of attention, which is
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lack of a central-peripheral trade-
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to a detriment in memory for periph
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Alternative measures of memory: Ass
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associative binding (Touryan et al,
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greatly diminish or disappear with
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Factors unrelated to intrinsic emot
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faces or places (Puri & Wojciulik,
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We predict that the pattern of memo
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ackground they had seen in the stud
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component (F(2,34) = 5.45, MSe = 0.
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Associative Memory In the associati
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The number of fixations made were a
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longer total gaze duration on the e
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.54], nor on backgrounds of scenes
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the background when presented later
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Section 3.1. Introduction Section 3
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were then shown, preceded by a 20 s
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2.56, p < .001, partial eta 2 = .71
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(negative, neutral, positive) and s
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object in a scene. There was no sig
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eradication of any emotional enhanc
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possible that the emotional stimuli
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central-peripheral trade off in the
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Section 3.3. Results Results of the
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Planned contrasts revealed the impa
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component (object, background) inte
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ackground of the scene. There was n
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Section 3.4. Discussion There was e
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identify with eye movement recordin
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Table 5.7. Average ratings (standar
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emotional influence on the results
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Figure 5.7. Specific and general re
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ecognition of positive and negative
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Figure 5.9. Specific and General Re
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Section 5.3. Eye movement results T
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.01). Post-hoc Tukey’s HSD were u
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- Page 260 and 261: emotional and neutral object [F(1,6
- Page 262 and 263: Figure 5.16. Experiments 7 - 10: Av
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- Page 272 and 273: alternative measures of attention h
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- Page 286 and 287: participant and the artificial prod
- Page 288 and 289: References Adolphs, R. (2002). Reco
- Page 290 and 291: Buchanan, T. W. (2007). Retrieval o
- Page 292 and 293: Davidson, R. J. (1994). On emotion,
- Page 294 and 295: Gardiner, J. M., Ramponi, C., & Ric
- Page 296 and 297: James, W. (1884). What is an emotio
- Page 298 and 299: Levine, L. J., & Bluck, S. (2004).
- Page 300 and 301: components. Journal of Experimental
- Page 302 and 303: Rowe, G., Hirsh, J. B., & Anderson,
- Page 304 and 305: Talmi, D., Schimmack, U., Paterson,
- Page 308 and 309: Appendix 2.2. ANOVA Analyses for Ex
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