Title: Effects of Emotions and Cognitive Load on Memory
1Effects of Emotions and Cognitive Load on Memory
- Presented at the
- University of California, Irvine
- by
- Namrata Mahajan
May 14, 2005
2Acknowledgements
- Sarah Roper-Coleman, UCI
- Dr. Peter H. Ditto, UCI
- Mentor
- Dr. Valerie Jenness, UCI
- Honors Seminar
- Instructor
- Research Assistants
- Tiffany Fan, UCI
- Allyson Dong, UCI
- Funding
- Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program
(UROP)
3Memory is Important!!!
- - Memory is important to be able to
function in everyday life! -
- Riding a bicycle
- Counting change
- Driving
- Remembering the name of someone you just met
4What is Memory?
Memory is the ability to use or to remember
information that was previously encoded or
processed (Ericsson Chase, 1982).
5Memory and Emotions
Studies show that emotionally charged events are
remembered better than ordinary, neutral events
(e.g. Christianson, 1992).
- Mood Congruent Theory- We remember events
that match our current mood.
6Memory Cognitive Load
- Cognitive Load- The total amount of mental
activity imposed on working-memory at an instance
in time (Cooper, 1998).
Working-Memory ? Long-Term Memory
- Excessive cognitive loads affect
memory and make
learning more
difficult.
7Hypotheses
- H1 Participants will remember
mood-congruent better than mood-incongruent
information.
- H2 Participants without cognitive load will
remember information better than those with
cognitive load.
- H3 Participants under both an emotional
condition and cognitive load will remember
more mood- congruent information.
8Methods
9Methods
- Demographics (e.g. age, ethnicity etc).
- Emotion Elicitation Task
- e.g. Please describe three to five things that
make you the most happy. - Learning Task (30 slides with or without
cognitive load). - 10 happy
- 10 sad
- 10 neutral
- Distracter Activity
- Recognition Task
- Debriefing
10(No Transcript)
11Methods
- Demographics (e.g. age, ethnicity etc).
- Emotion Elicitation Task
- e.g. Please describe three to five things that
make you the most happy. - Learning Task (30 slides with or without
cognitive load). - 10 happy
- 10 sad
- 10 neutral
- Distracter Activity
- Recognition Task
- Debriefing
12(No Transcript)
13Happy
14Sad
15Neutral
16Methods
- Demographics (e.g. age, ethnicity etc).
- Emotion Elicitation Task
- e.g. Please describe three to five things that
make you the most happy. - Learning Task (30 slides with or without
cognitive load). - 10 happy
- 10 sad
- 10 neutral
- Distracter Activity
- Recognition Task
- Debriefing
17Distracter Activity (Anagrams)
18Methods
- Demographics (e.g. age, ethnicity etc).
- Emotion Elicitation Task
- e.g. Please describe three to five things that
make you the most happy. - Learning Task (30 slides with or without
cognitive load). - 10 happy
- 10 sad
- 10 neutral
- Distracter Activity
- Recognition Task
- Debriefing
19Methods
- Demographics (e.g. age, ethnicity etc).
- Emotion Elicitation Task
- Please describe three to five things that make
you the most happy. - Learning Task (30 slides with or without
cognitive load). - 10 happy
- 10 sad
- 10 neutral
- Distracter Activity
- Recognition Task
- Debriefing
20Results
21Participants - Gender
N200
22Participants - Ethnicity
23- H1 Participants will remember mood-congruent
slides better than mood-incongruent slides.
24- H1 Participants will remember mood-congruent
slides better than mood-incongruent slides.
25Method
- Each participant given score out of a possible 20
- 20 no false positives and no mistakes
26- H1 Participants will remember mood-congruent
slides better than mood-incongruent slides.
27- H1 Participants will remember mood-congruent
slides better than mood-incongruent slides.
28- H1 Participants will remember mood-congruent
slides better than mood-incongruent slides.
29Mean Number of Slides Accurately Recognized
30- H2 Participants without cognitive load will
remember slides better than those with cognitive
load.
No Load
Load
31- Mean number of slides accurately recognized
No Load
Load
32Mean Number of Slides Accurately Recognized
Although not significant, there is a trend for
participants without cognitive load to have
higher accuracy rates than participants with
cognitive load.
Mean Number of Slides Accurately Recognized
Cognitive Load
33- H3 Participants under both an emotional
condition and cognitive load will remember more
mood congruent slides.
No Load
Load
34H3 Participants under both an emotional
condition and cognitive load will remember more
mood congruent slides.
No Load
Load
35- Mean number of slides accurately recognized
No Load
Load
36- Mean number of slides accurately recognized
No Load
Load
37Possible Explanations and Future Directions
- Ceiling Effects
- Number of Slides
- Timing
- Distracter Activity
- Emotion Eliciting Activity
38For more information, please contact
- Namrata Mahajan
- Department of Psychology and Social Behavior
- University of California, Irvine
- nmahajan_at_uci.edu