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Examining the effects of emotional valence and arousal on source memory: A meta-analysis of behavioral evidence.

Diana R PereiraAna C Teixeira-SantosAdriana Conceição Soares SampaioAna P Pinheiro
Published in: Emotion (Washington, D.C.) (2022)
The current meta-analysis examined the effects of valence and arousal on source memory accuracy, including the identification of variables that moderate the magnitude and direction of those effects. Fifty-three studies, comprising 85 individual experiments ( N = 3,040 participants), were selected. Three separate analyses focusing on valence effects (valence-based: negative-neutral; positive-neutral; negative-positive) and other three focusing exclusively on arousal (arousal-based: high-low; medium-low; high-medium) were considered. Effect sizes varied from very small to medium. For the valence-based analyses, source memory accuracy was impaired for emotional compared with neutral stimuli ( d unb = -.14 for negative-neutral; d unb = -.11 for positive-neutral), with a similar performance found for the negative-positive comparison ( d unb = -.04). In the case of arousal-based analyses, source memory was improved for stimuli with high and medium arousal versus low arousal ( d unb = .27, d unb = .49, respectively), with no statistically significant difference between high and medium arousal stimuli ( d unb = -.12). Emotion effects on source memory were modulated by methodological factors. These factors may account for the variety findings typically found in emotion-related source memory research and could be systematically addressed in future studies. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
Keyphrases
  • working memory
  • systematic review
  • autism spectrum disorder
  • high intensity