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Wednesday, November 30, 2005

Mood and Memory.

Do you ever wonder if your mood affects the way you think? I’m not talking about behaving more aggressively when you’re angry or more passively when you’re sad; I’m talking about the subtler impact on cognitive processing. Some recent research has indicated that we process things differently depending on whether we’re in a positive or negative mood. People in good moods tend to make more connections between related items, while people in bad moods generally focus on what’s in front of them.

Justin Storbeck and Gerald L. Clore realized that there may be a connection between this research on emotion and other research on false memories (presumably they were in a good mood when they made the connection!). Memory research (as we’ve discussed here) makes a distinction between item-specific and relational processing in memories, each of which are activated in different circumstances. Isn’t it possible, then, that we might remember different things depending on whether we’re in a good or bad mood?

One method of studying false memories is to present people with a list of items, all related to a critical word, which is not included in the list. For example, the list might include boat, wind, mast, yaw, boom, and water, but not the critical word sail. Then participants are asked to write down as many of the items as possible which appeared on the list. People are often more likely to list the critical word (the one not on the list) than any of the words they actually saw.

Storbeck and Clore wondered: if we’re more likely to see relationships between items when we’re in a good mood, then are we more likely to demonstrate false memories, which seem to derive from those same relationsips? They used music to induce positive or negative moods in people, then gave them the false memory test. In a second experiment, they expanded on the basic false memory paradigm by asking participants to not only list words they had seen, but any related words they could think of (they were instructed to place a check mark next to words they hadn’t actually seen). Here are the results:

The results were as predicted: people in good moods given the basic test falsely recalled the critical words more often than those in bad moods. When they were allowed to write down related words, people in negative moods still showed a lower incidence of false memory. They also were less likely to write down the critical word as a related word — it indeed appears that they made fewer connections between the related words.

Storbeck and Clore also found that there was no difference between the positive and negative mood groups in true recall — they remembered the words actually appearing on the list with equal accuracy. They argue that this result supports the fuzzy-trace theory of memory, which says that we remember things in two ways — verbatim and gist memory. Normally, we form both types of memories for everything, but negative moods appear to inhibit gist memory, so only verbatim memories are formed.

Storbeck, J., & Clore, G.L. (2005). With sadness comes accuracy, with happiness, false memory. Psychological Science 16(10), 785-791.

[Cognitive Daily]
10:34:12 PM    comment

Pollutants link to diabetes risk. Exposure to high levels of a class of environmental pollutants may increase the risk of developing type 2 diabetes, research suggests. [BBC News | Science/Nature | UK Edition]
10:22:24 PM    comment

Blackboard's WebCT Deal Spurs Antitrust Questioning - Terence O'Hara, Washington Post Staff Writer. A deal by educational software company Blackboard Inc. to buy its chief competitor has raised questions from antitrust experts at the Justice Department. District-based Blackboard and the competitor, privately owned WebCT Inc., each has received two reque [Online Learning Update]
6:47:49 PM    comment

Practical natural language processing, circa 2005. If documentation and quality assurance are dull topics -- and let's face it, they are -- you'd think that combining them in a product for assuring the quality of documentation would be a crashing bore. But here at the Gilbane content management conference in Boston today, I saw a fascinating demo of just such a product: Acrolinx's acrocheck. The company has deep roots in computational linguistics, has spent thirty years developing an engine for analyzing natural languages, and is focused entirely on using that engine to solve a single problem: defining rules for consistent use of terminology and grammar in technical documentation, and measuring how consistently teams of tech writers apply them. ... [Jon's Radio]
6:41:26 PM    comment

Evidence suggests Alzheimer's may be a type of diabetes.

Researchers at Rhode Island Hospital and Brown Medical School have discovered that insulin and its receptors drop significantly in the brain during the early stages of Alzheimer's disease, and that levels decline progressively as the disease becomes more severe, leading to further evidence that Alzheimer's is a new type of diabetes. They also found that acetylcholine deficiency, a hallmark of the disease, is linked directly to the loss of insulin and insulin-like growth factor function in the brain.

[Science Blog -]
6:37:03 PM    comment

Routine Tylenol for nursing home residents with dementia increases activity.

Nursing homes should consider the potential benefits of routinely giving over-the-counter painkillers to residents who have dementia and are likely to have from chronic pain, Saint Louis University research suggests. The study, published in the November issue of the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, finds that nursing home residents with moderate to severe dementia who were given acetaminophen were more socially active than those who received a placebo.

[Science Blog -]
6:33:39 PM    comment

Podcast Chaos Be Gone. The anarchic state of audio on the internet is about to become more organized. A handful of new technologies scan entire podcasts for specific words. By Kim Zetter. [Wired News] this will be disruptive big-time because now the oral traditions and the spoken word can be found and used much more easily.  Some of the obvious applications are digital meeting notes that are searchable and verifiable -- your really said that?

Combine this with VoIP telephony and integrated information searching takes on new dimensions and conference calls may even become managable in real time with additional processing.

6:28:03 PM    comment

© Copyright 2005 Bruce Landon.
 
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