Article Synopsis

  • The text discusses how memories of emotional experiences, both positive and negative, interact with our working memory in three ways: emotions can influence memory, memory can influence emotions, and feelings can be retained in memory.
  • Research indicates that affective working memory (which deals with emotions) is distinct from cognitive memory processes, suggesting that managing feelings is crucial for decision-making and understanding emotional changes in later life.
  • The authors argue that affective working memory plays a vital role in psychological functions and could help explain various clinical disorders.

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Article Abstract

When people ruminate about an unfortunate encounter with a loved one, savor a long-sought accomplishment, or hold in mind feelings from a marvelous or regretfully tragic moment, what mental processes orchestrate these psychological phenomena? Such experiences typify how affect interacts with working memory, which we posit can occur in three primary ways: emotional experiences can modulate working memory, working memory can modulate emotional experiences, and feelings can be the mental representations maintained by working memory. We propose that this last mode constitutes distinct neuropsychological processes that support the integration of particular cognitive and affective processes: . Accumulating behavioral and neural evidence suggests that affective working memory processes maintain feelings and are partially separable from their cognitive working memory counterparts. Affective working memory may be important for elucidating the contribution of affect to decision making, preserved emotional processes in later life, and mechanisms of psychological dysfunction in clinical disorders. We review basic behavioral, neuroscience, and clinical research that provides evidence for affective working memory; consider its theoretical implications; and evaluate its functional role within the psychological architecture. In sum, the perspective we advocate is that affective working memory is a fundamental mechanism of mind.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6606331PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1745691619837597DOI Listing

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