منابع مشابه
RUNNING HEAD: Mood-Congruent Memory in Depression Mood-congruent True and False Memory: Effects of Depression
The Deese/Roediger-McDermott paradigm was used to investigate the effect of depression on true and false recognition. In this experiment, true and false recognition was examined across positive, neutral, negative, and depression-relevant lists for individuals with and without a diagnosis of major depressive disorder. Results showed that participants with major depressive disorder falsely recogn...
متن کاملBrain mechanisms for mood congruent memory facilitation.
Emotional information is better remembered when mood at the time of retrieval matches it in valence (positive mood, positive material). An associative memory model predicts that this 'mood congruent' facilitation is due to the mood-related reactivation at retrieval of emotional responses which were linked to valenced information at encoding. To test this model, we presented subjects with positi...
متن کاملMood-congruent true and false memory: effects of depression.
The Deese/Roediger-McDermott paradigm was used to investigate the effect of depression on true and false recognition. In this experiment true and false recognition was examined across positive, neutral, negative, and depression-relevant lists for individuals with and without a diagnosis of major depressive disorder. Results showed that participants with major depressive disorder falsely recogni...
متن کاملA New Test of Music Mood Induction and Mood Congruent Memory
Background Mood-Congruent Memory (MCM) is defined as the observation that a given mood tends to enhance the encoding or retrieval of target events that are similar in valence or mood. Mood induction has been used to study MCM in the lab. Two common methods are the Velten Mood Induction Procedure (VMIP) and the Music Mood Induction Technique (MMIT). A potential problem with VMIP is it may lead t...
متن کاملThe Interaction of Mood and Rumination in Depression: Effects on Mood Maintenance and Mood-Congruent Autobiographical Memory
Rumination is a response to distress in which individuals focus repetitively on their feelings and the causes and consequences of those feelings. When induced to ruminate, dysphorics exhibit more negative mood and recall more negative memories, but these effects are not seen in nondysphorics. This pattern of results could be due to trait-like differences between dysphoric and nondysphoric indiv...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society
سال: 1983
ISSN: 0090-5054
DOI: 10.3758/bf03330000