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Prime time news: The influence of primed positive and negative emotion on susceptibility to false memories
Authors:Stephen Porter  Leanne ten Brinke  Sean N. Riley  Alysha Baker
Affiliation:1. Centre for the Advancement of Psychological Science and Law (CAPSL), University of British Columbia – Okanagan, Kelowna, BC, Canadastephen.porter@ubc.ca;3. Haas School of Business, University of California Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, USA;4. Centre for the Advancement of Psychological Science and Law (CAPSL), University of British Columbia – Okanagan, Kelowna, BC, Canada
Abstract:We examined the relation between emotion and susceptibility to misinformation using a novel paradigm, the ambiguous stimuli affective priming (ASAP) paradigm. Participants (N = 88) viewed ambiguous neutral images primed either at encoding or retrieval to be interpreted as either highly positive or negative (or neutral/not primed). After viewing the images, they either were asked misleading or non-leading questions. Following a delay, memory accuracy for the original images was assessed. Results indicated that any emotional priming at encoding led to a higher susceptibility to misinformation relative to priming at recall. In particular, inducing a negative interpretation of the image at encoding led to an increased susceptibility of false memories for major misinformation (an entire object not actually present in the scene). In contrast, this pattern was reversed when priming was used at recall; a negative reinterpretation of the image decreased memory distortion relative to unprimed images. These findings suggest that, with precise experimental control, the experience of emotion at event encoding, in particular, is implicated in false memory susceptibility.
Keywords:Emotion  False memory  Memory
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