- Is It Heartburn or a Heart Condition? An Expert Explains
- Bloated After That Holiday Meal? What’s Normal, What’s Not
- Get Off the Couch: Another Study Shows Sitting’s Health Dangers
- Falling Vaccination Rates Brings Spikes in Measles Worldwide
- Nearly 260 Million Americans Could Be Overweight or Obese by 2050
- Over 40? Get Fitter and Live 5 Extra Years
- Can AI Boost Accuracy of Doctors’ Diagnoses?
- More Evidence That GLP-1 Meds Curb Alcohol Abuse
- Breathing Dirty Air Might Raise Eczema Risks
- Chlamydia Vaccine Shows Early Promise in Mice
‘Emotional Hangover’ Is Real and Affects Future Experiences: Study
Experiences that tug at our feelings create emotional “hangovers” that affect future events and make them easier to remember.
“How we remember events is not just a consequence of the external world we experience, but is also strongly influenced by our internal states. And these internal states can persist and color future experiences,” said study senior author Lila Davachi. She is an associate professor at New York University’s Department of Psychology and Center for Neural Science.
For the study, researchers assigned participants to look at a series of images.
One group was first shown images that aroused emotion, and then neutral ones. The other group looked first at neutral images, then at the emotional ones. Six hours later, the participants were tested to see how well they recalled what they had seen.
People who were exposed first to images that provoked emotion had sharper recall of the neutral images than those who saw neutral images first, the study found. Brain scans suggest this is because the emotion-provoking images primed their brains to remember things more effectively.
“We see that memory for non-emotional experiences is better if they are encountered after an emotional event,” Davachi said in a university news release.
“These findings make clear that our cognition [thinking] is highly influenced by preceding experiences and, specifically, that emotional brain states can persist for long periods of time,” she concluded.
The study was published Dec. 26 in the journal Nature Neuroscience.
More information
If you’re feeling forgetful, check out these tips at the U.S. National Institute on Aging.
Source: HealthDay
Copyright © 2024 HealthDay. All rights reserved.