Negative emotional valence decreased memory performance and subjective confidence, particularly for low arousal words, and modulated heart rate and heart-rate variability during recognition memory.
Emotional valence of encoded items influences recognition memory and metacognition, and this relationship is partly related to instantaneous cardiac activity.
Emotion alters how we feel, see, and experience the world. In the domain of memory, the emotional valence and arousal of memorised stimuli can modulate both the acuity and content of episodic recall. However, no experiment has investigated whether arousal and valence also influence metacognition for memory (i.e. the process of self-monitoring memories). In a pre-registered study, we applied a novel psychophysiological design together with computational models of metacognition to assess the influence of stimulus valence and arousal on the sensitivity, bias, and efficiency of metamemory. To estimate the role of physiological arousal in mediating these effects, we recorded cardiac measures through pulse oximetry. We found that negative valence substantially decreased both memory performance and subjective confidence, in particular for low arousal words. Simultaneously, we found that emotional valence modulated both heart rate and heart-rate variability (HRV) during recognition memory. Exploratory trial-level analyses further revealed that subjective confidence was encoded in instantaneous heart-rate fluctuations and that this relationship was also modulated by emotional valence. Our results demonstrate that recognition memory and metacognition are influenced by the emotional valence of encoded items and that this correlation is in part related to cardiac activity.
Legrand et al. (Sun,) conducted a other in Memory and metacognition. Emotional valence and arousal of stimuli was evaluated on Sensitivity, bias, and efficiency of metamemory, and cardiac measures. Negative emotional valence decreased memory performance and subjective confidence, particularly for low arousal words, and modulated heart rate and heart-rate variability during recognition memory.