Friend or foe? Decoding the facilitative and disruptive effects of emotion on working memory in younger and older adults

A growing body of work on emotion-cognition interactions has revealed both facilitative and disruptive effects of emotion on working memory in younger adults. These differing effects may vary by the goal relevancy of emotion within a task. Additionally, it is possible that these emotional effects wo...

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Main Authors: Linda eTruong, Lixia eYang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-02-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00094/full
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spelling doaj-0013474359af40f4a3b50a7f682d7f3c2020-11-24T23:40:05ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782014-02-01510.3389/fpsyg.2014.0009472739Friend or foe? Decoding the facilitative and disruptive effects of emotion on working memory in younger and older adultsLinda eTruong0Lixia eYang1Ryerson UniversityRyerson UniversityA growing body of work on emotion-cognition interactions has revealed both facilitative and disruptive effects of emotion on working memory in younger adults. These differing effects may vary by the goal relevancy of emotion within a task. Additionally, it is possible that these emotional effects would be larger for older adults, considering findings of preserved emotional processing with age. To test these hypotheses, the current study examined the effects of emotional content and aging on working memory for target information in the presence of distraction. Thirty-six younger (ages 18-29) and 36 older adults (ages 65-87) completed a delayed-response working memory task. Participants viewed two target words intermixed with two distracter words, and then judged whether a subsequently presented probe word was one of the target words. The emotional content (valence and arousal) of targets and distracters was systematically manipulated. Results indicated that emotional targets facilitated working memory in both age groups. In contrast, emotional distracters disrupted performance. Negative distracters were particularly disruptive for older adults, but younger adults did not show an emotional interference effect. These findings help clarify discrepancies in the literature and contribute to the sparse research on emotional working memory in older adults.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00094/fullAgingEmotionsworking memoryinterference resolutiondistractionGoal relevance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Linda eTruong
Lixia eYang
spellingShingle Linda eTruong
Lixia eYang
Friend or foe? Decoding the facilitative and disruptive effects of emotion on working memory in younger and older adults
Frontiers in Psychology
Aging
Emotions
working memory
interference resolution
distraction
Goal relevance
author_facet Linda eTruong
Lixia eYang
author_sort Linda eTruong
title Friend or foe? Decoding the facilitative and disruptive effects of emotion on working memory in younger and older adults
title_short Friend or foe? Decoding the facilitative and disruptive effects of emotion on working memory in younger and older adults
title_full Friend or foe? Decoding the facilitative and disruptive effects of emotion on working memory in younger and older adults
title_fullStr Friend or foe? Decoding the facilitative and disruptive effects of emotion on working memory in younger and older adults
title_full_unstemmed Friend or foe? Decoding the facilitative and disruptive effects of emotion on working memory in younger and older adults
title_sort friend or foe? decoding the facilitative and disruptive effects of emotion on working memory in younger and older adults
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2014-02-01
description A growing body of work on emotion-cognition interactions has revealed both facilitative and disruptive effects of emotion on working memory in younger adults. These differing effects may vary by the goal relevancy of emotion within a task. Additionally, it is possible that these emotional effects would be larger for older adults, considering findings of preserved emotional processing with age. To test these hypotheses, the current study examined the effects of emotional content and aging on working memory for target information in the presence of distraction. Thirty-six younger (ages 18-29) and 36 older adults (ages 65-87) completed a delayed-response working memory task. Participants viewed two target words intermixed with two distracter words, and then judged whether a subsequently presented probe word was one of the target words. The emotional content (valence and arousal) of targets and distracters was systematically manipulated. Results indicated that emotional targets facilitated working memory in both age groups. In contrast, emotional distracters disrupted performance. Negative distracters were particularly disruptive for older adults, but younger adults did not show an emotional interference effect. These findings help clarify discrepancies in the literature and contribute to the sparse research on emotional working memory in older adults.
topic Aging
Emotions
working memory
interference resolution
distraction
Goal relevance
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00094/full
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