Immediate memory consequences of the effect of emotion on attention to pictures

  1. Deborah Talmi1,3,4,
  2. Adam K. Anderson1,
  3. Lily Riggs1,2,
  4. Jeremy B. Caplan2, and
  5. Morris Moscovitch1,2
  1. 1 University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario M5S 3G3, Canada;
  2. 2 Rotman Research Institute, Baycrest Centre, Toronto, Ontario M6A 2E1, Canada
  1. 3 Present address:

    3 Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging 12 Queen Square, London WC1N 3BG, UK.

Abstract

Emotionally arousing stimuli are at once both highly attention grabbing and memorable. We examined whether emotional enhancement of memory (EEM) reflects an indirect effect of emotion on memory, mediated by enhanced attention to emotional items during encoding. We tested a critical prediction of the mediation hypothesis—that regions conjointly activated by emotion and attention would correlate with subsequent EEM. Participants were scanned with fMRI while they watched emotional or neutral pictures under instructions to attend to them a lot or a little, and were then given an immediate recognition test. A region in the left fusiform gyrus was activated by emotion, voluntary attention, and subsequent EEM. A functional network, different for each attention condition, connected this region and the amygdala, which was associated with emotion and EEM, but not with voluntary attention. These findings support an indirect cortical mediation account of immediate EEM that may complement a direct modulation model.

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