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Mood, motivation, and misinformation: aging and affective state influences on memory
Authors:Hess Thomas M  Popham Lauren E  Emery Lisa  Elliott Tonya
Affiliation:Department of Psychology, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27695-7650, USA. thomas_hess@ncsu.edu
Abstract:Normative age differences in memory have typically been attributed to declines in basic cognitive and cortical mechanisms. The present study examined the degree to which dominant everyday affect might also be associated with age-related memory errors using the misinformation paradigm. Younger and older adults viewed a positive and a negative event, and then were exposed to misinformation about each event. Older adults exhibited a higher likelihood than young adults of falsely identifying misinformation as having occurred in the events. Consistent with expectations, strength of the misinformation effect was positively associated with dominant mood, and controlling for mood eliminated any age effects. Also, motivation to engage in complex cognitive activity was negatively associated with susceptibility to misinformation, and susceptibility was stronger for negative than for positive events. We argue that motivational processes underlie all of the observed effects, and that such processes are useful in understanding age differences in memory performance.
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