Abstract
Expressive writing about past negative events has been shown to lead to a slew of positive outcomes. However, little is known about why writing about something negative would have positive effects. While some have posited that telling a narrative of a past negative event or current anxiety “frees up” cognitive resources, allowing individuals to focus more on the task at hand, there is little neural evidence suggesting that expressive writing has an effect on cognitive load. Moreover, little is known about how individual differences in the content of expressive writing could affect neural processing and the cognitive benefits writing confers. In our experiment, we compared brain activity in a group that had engaged in expressive writing vs. a control group, during performance on a feedback-based paired-associate word-learning task. We found that across groups, differential activation in the dorsal striatum in response to positive vs. negative feedback significantly predicted better later memory. Moreover, writing about a past failure resulted in more activation relative to the control group during the learning task in the mid-cingulate cortex (MCC), an area of the brain crucial to processing negative emotion. While our results do not provide support for the assertion that expressive writing alters attentional processing, our findings suggest that choosing to write about particularly intense past negative experiences like a difficult past failure may have resulted in changes in neural activation during task processing.
Highlights
Expressive writing about a past negative experience has been shown to lead to a slew of positive outcomes
What is it about writing about negative experiences that leads to such benefits? While there is some evidence that writing about a past negative event leads to reductions in the physiological stress response (DiMenichi et al, 2018), some have posited that writing down negative feelings ‘‘frees up’’ cognitive load to better focus on the task at hand (Klein and Boals, 2001; Ramirez and Beilock, 2011), leading to observed performance benefits
We examined how writing about a past failure affected both cognitive performance and neural processing on a feedback-based paired-association word-learning task
Summary
Expressive writing about a past negative experience has been shown to lead to a slew of positive outcomes. Writing about anxieties has resulted in improved cognitive performance, both in the laboratory (Klein and Boals, 2001; DiMenichi and Richmond, 2015; DiMenichi et al, 2018) as well as in the classroom on high stakes exams (Ramirez and Beilock, 2011). While there is some evidence that writing about a past negative event leads to reductions in the physiological stress response (DiMenichi et al, 2018), some have posited that writing down negative feelings ‘‘frees up’’ cognitive load to better focus on the task at hand (Klein and Boals, 2001; Ramirez and Beilock, 2011), leading to observed performance benefits. There is little empirical evidence regarding how expressive writing relates to cognitive processing in the brain, as well as other brain networks vital to cognition.
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