Canli et al Flashcards

1
Q

What is the background of the study?

A
  1. Emotional experiences are often better recalled than non emotional ones
  2. Amygdala appears to play a critical role in the enhancement of emotional memory
  3. Found significant correlation between amygdala activation related to emotional stimuli and subsequent memory
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2
Q

Why did the previous study suggest amygdala appears to play a critical role in memory?

A

Because patients with damaged amygdala do not remember emotional better than neutral ones

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3
Q

What are the problems with previous studies? How did Canli change this?

A

Previous study used independent group, difference could be due to individual differences between pps

Now wanted to use a repeated measures design to test phasic response

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4
Q

What are the two aims of the study?

A
  1. Whether amygdala is sensitive to varying degrees of experienced emotional intensity
  2. Whether the degree of emotional intensity affects the role of the amygdala in enhancing memory for the stimuli
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5
Q

Describe the sample used and sampling technique

A
  • 10 right-handed female (gynocentric sample)

- volunteer sample

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6
Q

Why only used female?

A
  • -> more likely to report intense emotional experiences

- -> show more physiological reactivity

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7
Q

Describe the IV

A

Intensity of the emotional arousal to each of the 96 scenes that were presented to each ppt

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8
Q

Describe the DV

A
  • amygdala activation measured by fMRI

- and measure of memory when pps had to recognise the image 3 weeks after

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9
Q

What is fMRI?

A

Measures brain activity by detecting changes associated with blood flow

Area of high activity receive more oxygenated blood

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10
Q

Describe the procedure (inside fMRI)

A
  • saw 96 scenes for 2.88s each
  • in randomised order
  • all scenes from IAP, had been rated for valence and arousal
  • with 13s interstimulus interval, viewed a fixation cross
  • rate their emotional arousal by buttons from 0 to 3
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11
Q

What does high/low valence, and high/low arousal represent?

A

Low valence = negative / high valence = neutral

Low arousal = tranquil / high arousal = highly arousing

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12
Q

Why is there interstimulus interval?

A

It acts like a control to bring the pps emotion back to baseline, so the next scene won’t be affected by the previous scene shown

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13
Q

What does 0-3 on the buttons represent?

A

0=not emotionally intense at all

3=extremely emotional intense

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14
Q

When was the unexpected test?

A

Three weeks after

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15
Q

Describe the procedure in the unexpected test

A

–> They viewed all of the previously seen and 48 new scenes (foils)

–> Pps were asked whether they had seen each picture before

–> Report whether they remembered with certainty (“remember”), or had a less certain feeling of familiarity (“know”), or forgotten, indicated by (1, 2, 3 respectively)

–>A correlation map was created to correlate brain activation with pps arousal ratings and memory scores

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16
Q

What are the characteristics of the foil?

A

Foil were selected to match with previously presented scenes in their valence and arousal characteristics

17
Q

How is the headmovement of pps minimised?

A

By a bite bar using which was formed with each pps dental imprints

18
Q

How was the procedure standardised?

A

Images are all from IAPs

Told to view each picture for the ENTIRE time that it was displayed

19
Q

What are the controls?

A

Press the button using right hand, because they are right-handed

Randomised order
(so order of presentation did not affect the emotional experience and emotional intensity ratings of the participants)

MRI used, tells us brain activity without bias

20
Q

What are the results? (memory, amygdala activation, correlation)

A

Memory performance was significantly better for scenes that were rated as highly emotionally intense than rated less intense

Amygdala activation was bilaterally correlated with higher ratings of individual experienced emotional intensity

Correlation between amygdala activation and memory grew stronger as subjects experienced greater emotional intensity

21
Q

What are the conclusions? (Is it sensitive, memory? intensity?)

A

The amygdala is sensitive to individually experienced emotional intensity of visual stimuli

The activity in left amygdala during encoding is predictive of subsequent memory

The degree to which amygdala activation enhances the memory is in relation to the emotional intensity of the stimuli