Mood States Modulate Activity in Semantic Brain Areas during Emotional Word Encoding
M. Kiefer, S. Schuch, W. Schenck, K. Fiedler, Cerebral Cortex 17 (2007) 1516–1530.
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Artikel
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| Englisch
Autor*in
Kiefer, Markus;
Schuch, Stefanie;
Schenck, Wolfram
;
Fiedler, Klaus


Abstract
It is controversially discussed whether or not mood-congruent recall (i.e., superior recall for mood-congruent material) reflects memory encoding processes or reduces to processes during retrieval. We therefore investigated the neurophysiological correlates of mood-dependent memory during emotional word encoding. Event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded while participants in good or bad mood states encoded words of positive and negative valence. Words were either complete or had to be generated from fragments. Participants had to memorize words for subsequent recall. Mood-congruent recall tended to be largest in good mood for generated words. Starting at 200 ms, mood-congruent ERP effects of word valence were obtained in good, but not in bad mood. Only for good mood, source analysis revealed valence-related activity in ventral temporal cortex and for generated words also in prefrontal cortex. These areas are known to be involved in semantic processing. Our findings are consistent with the view that mood-congruent recall depends on the activation of mood-congruent semantic knowledge during encoding. Incoming stimuli are more readily transformed according to stored knowledge structures in good mood particularly during generative encoding tasks. The present results therefore show that mood-congruent memory originates already during encoding and cannot be reduced to strategic processes during retrieval.
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Erscheinungsjahr
Zeitschriftentitel
Cerebral Cortex
Band
17
Zeitschriftennummer
7
Seite
1516-1530
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Kiefer, Markus ; Schuch, Stefanie ; Schenck, Wolfram ; Fiedler, Klaus: Mood States Modulate Activity in Semantic Brain Areas during Emotional Word Encoding. In: Cerebral Cortex Bd. 17, Oxford University Press (OUP) (2007), Nr. 7, S. 1516–1530
Kiefer M, Schuch S, Schenck W, Fiedler K. Mood States Modulate Activity in Semantic Brain Areas during Emotional Word Encoding. Cerebral Cortex. 2007;17(7):1516-1530. doi:10.1093/cercor/bhl062
Kiefer, M., Schuch, S., Schenck, W., & Fiedler, K. (2007). Mood States Modulate Activity in Semantic Brain Areas during Emotional Word Encoding. Cerebral Cortex, 17(7), 1516–1530. https://doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhl062
@article{Kiefer_Schuch_Schenck_Fiedler_2007, title={Mood States Modulate Activity in Semantic Brain Areas during Emotional Word Encoding}, volume={17}, DOI={10.1093/cercor/bhl062}, number={7}, journal={Cerebral Cortex}, publisher={Oxford University Press (OUP)}, author={Kiefer, Markus and Schuch, Stefanie and Schenck, Wolfram and Fiedler, Klaus}, year={2007}, pages={1516–1530} }
Kiefer, Markus, Stefanie Schuch, Wolfram Schenck, and Klaus Fiedler. “Mood States Modulate Activity in Semantic Brain Areas during Emotional Word Encoding.” Cerebral Cortex 17, no. 7 (2007): 1516–30. https://doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhl062.
M. Kiefer, S. Schuch, W. Schenck, and K. Fiedler, “Mood States Modulate Activity in Semantic Brain Areas during Emotional Word Encoding,” Cerebral Cortex, vol. 17, no. 7, pp. 1516–1530, 2007.
Kiefer, Markus, et al. “Mood States Modulate Activity in Semantic Brain Areas during Emotional Word Encoding.” Cerebral Cortex, vol. 17, no. 7, Oxford University Press (OUP), 2007, pp. 1516–30, doi:10.1093/cercor/bhl062.
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