Abstract

This study examined the separate influence and joint influences on event-based prospective memory task performance due to the valence of cues and the valence of contexts. We manipulated the valence of cues and contexts with pictures from the International Affective Picture System. The participants, undergraduate students, showed higher performance when neutral compared to valenced pictures were used for cueing prospective memory. In addition, neutral pictures were more effective as cues when they occurred in a valenced context than in the context of neutral pictures, but the effectiveness of valenced cues did not vary across contexts that differed in valence. The finding of an interaction between cue and context valence indicates that their respective influence on event-based prospective memory task performance cannot be understood in isolation from each other. Our findings are not consistent with by the prevailing view which holds that the scope of attention is broadened and narrowed, respectively, by positively and negatively valenced stimuli. Instead, our findings are more supportive of the recent proposal that the scope of attention is determined by the motivational intensity associated with valenced stimuli. Consistent with this proposal, we speculate that the motivational intensity associated with different retrieval cues determines the scope of attention, that contexts with different valence values determine participants’ task engagement, and that prospective memory task performance is determined jointly by attention scope and task engagement.

Highlights

  • Event-based prospective memory, the ability we use for making plans and promises and for carrying them out later in the appropriate context, is affected by the valence of the cues provided for retrieval

  • On the prospective memory task, the accuracy data, in the left panel of Fig. 2, showed that subjects were more successful with cues presented in the context of positively and negatively valenced pictures than in the context of neutral pictures

  • The results showed higher event-based prospective memory task performance when it was cued by means of neutral pictures compared to either positively or negatively valenced pictures

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Summary

Introduction

Event-based prospective memory, the ability we use for making plans and promises and for carrying them out later in the appropriate context, is affected by the valence of the cues provided for retrieval. A few studies have replicated this prospective memory advantage of positively over negatively valenced cues. The same outcome was reported by Rendell et al [3] who used the Virtual Week task to explore event-based prospective memory in younger and older adults. A study by Rummel, Hepp, Klein and Silberleitner [4] which examined the influence of valenced cues under different induced mood conditions revealed an advantage for positive over negative cues in their neutral mood condition, and in addition, it showed a substantially lower performance level when neutral cues were provided for retrieval

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