Canli Flashcards

1
Q

Aim

A
  1. To find whether emotive images will be better remembered than pictures with little emotion.
  2. To find whether the amygdala is sensitive to different levels of emotional intensity to external stimuli, and whether the level of emotional intensity enhances the memory of that stimuli.
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2
Q

2 kinds of medical scan

A
  1. Functional scans show activity levels in different areas of the brain.
    2, Structural scans take detailed pictures of the brain structure.
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3
Q

Research method, design

A

Lab, repeated measures design

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4
Q

Independent variable

A

level of arousal of each picture shown.
i) Not emotionally intense at all: Levels 0 & 1
ii) Extremely emotionally intense: Levels 2 & 3.

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5
Q

Dependent variable

A
  1. The fMRI measure of amygdala activation. For each of the 96 scenes, 11 frames were captured.
  2. The memory of the scene after 3 weeks.
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6
Q

Sample

A

10 right handed females, volunteers

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7
Q

How many emotional scenes

A

96 from International Affective Picture System

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8
Q

Valence ratings

A

1.17 (highly negative) - 5.44 (neutral)

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9
Q

How long each pic was presented for

A

2.88 sec and an interval of 12,96 sec where they viewed a fixation cross

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10
Q

How did participants indicate their emotional arousal?

A

By pressing a button with their right hand. They had to choose from 4 buttons on a scale of 0 - 3

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11
Q

How was the fMRI data collected?

A

1.5 Tesla fMRI scanner which is used to measure blood-oxygen-level-dependent contrast

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12
Q

What was the unexpected recognition test

A

They were called in 3 weeks after and they viewed 96 scenes and 48 foils (newly added). Participants were asked to judge whether they had remembered it, felt it was familiar, or forgotten it

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13
Q

Results

A
  1. The correlation between participants’ intensity rating and valence was -0.66. The correlation between participants’ intensity rating and arousal was 0.68. Participants’ ratings of emotional intensity reflected well the valence and arousal characteristics of the stimuli.
  2. Amygdala activation was significantly correlated with higher ratings of individually experienced emotional intensity.
  3. The follow-up memory task indicated that memory performance was better for scenes rated as highly emotionally intense than for scenes rated as less emotionally intense.
  4. The degree of left amygdala activation predicted whether the stimuli would be forgotten, appear familiar, or would be remembered.
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14
Q

Conclusion

A
  1. Canli found an association between individual experiences of emotional intensity for stimuli with amygdala activation and memory. The more emotionally intense an image is, the more likely it will be remembered.
    This provides evidence to explain why people remember emotionally intense experiences well.
  2. The amygdala is sensitive to individuals’ experienced emotional intensity of visual stimuli. The activity in the left amygdala during encoding is predictive of subsequent memory.
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15
Q

Strengths

A
  1. High Internal Validity
  2. High reliability
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16
Q

Weaknesses

A
  1. Low external validity
  2. Low ecological validity