Consistency of memory for emotionally arousing events: A review of prospective and experimental studies

TitleConsistency of memory for emotionally arousing events: A review of prospective and experimental studies
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of PublicationSubmitted
AuthorsAnne E. van Giezen, Ella Arensman, Philip Spinhoven, Gezinus Wolters
JournalClinical Psychology Review
Volume25
Issue7
Pagination935-953
ISSN02727358
Abstract

Abstract: Although emotionally arousing events are more memorable than ordinary daily life events, the nature of memories for emotionally arousing events is widely debated. On the one hand, researchers consider memories for highly emotional events as malleable and subject to distortion, while on the other hand these memories are perceived as both indelible and consistent over the lifetime. Up till now, a systematic comparison of research findings on consistency of memory for emotional events is lacking. This paper is the first effort to summarize available studies on consistency of memory for emotionally arousing events and to address methodological limitations and suggestions for future research as well. In general, findings show that quality of the selected studies is sufficient to good, with studies with victims of assault and studies on war-exposure reaching higher quality scores than studies on flashbulb memories and experimental memory studies. Victims of assault or war-exposure tend to amplify their memories for the event, while results from flashbulb memory research and experimental research suggest that memory for emotional events is either stable or diminishes over time.

DOI10.1016/j.cpr.2005.04.011
Short TitleConsistency of memory for emotionally arousing events