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Abstract

Volume 122 • Number 1

Spring 2009


 


The valence of event-based prospective memory cues or the context in which they occur affects their detection


ARLO CLARK-FOOS, GENE A. BREWER, RICHARD L. MARSH, and J. THADEUS MEEKS
University of Georgia

GABRIEL I. COOK
Claremont McKenna College


Event-based prospective memory tasks entail detecting cues or reminders in our environment related to previously established intentions. If they are detected at an opportune time, then the intention can be fulfilled. In Experiments 1æ1c, we gave people 3 different nonfocal intentions (e.g., respond to words denoting animals) and discovered that negatively valenced cues delivered the intention to mind less frequently than positively valenced cues. In Experiment 2, this effect was extended to valenced and neutral sentential contexts with convergent results that cues embedded in negatively valenced sentences evoked remembering the intention less often than in positive contexts. In addition, both classes of valence caused the intention to be forgotten more often than a more neutral context. We propose that valence has the ability to usurp attentional resources that otherwise would have supported successful prospective memory performance.

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ISSN: 1939-8298


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