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  1. The effect of emotion on cue utilization and the organization of behavior.J. A. Easterbrook - 1959 - Psychological Review 66 (3):183-201.
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  • Emotion and memory narrowing: A review and goal-relevance approach.Linda J. Levine & Robin S. Edelstein - 2009 - Cognition and Emotion 23 (5):833-875.
    People typically show excellent memory for information that is central to an emotional event but poorer memory for peripheral details. Not all studies demonstrate memory narrowing as a result of emotion, however. Critically important emotional information is sometimes forgotten; seemingly peripheral details are sometimes preserved. To make sense of both the general pattern of findings that emotion leads to memory narrowing, and findings that violate this pattern, this review addresses mechanisms through which emotion enhances and impairs memory. Divergent approaches to (...)
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  • Impact of individual differences upon emotion-induced memory trade-offs.Jill D. Waring, Jessica D. Payne, Daniel L. Schacter & Elizabeth A. Kensinger - 2010 - Cognition and Emotion 24 (1):150-167.
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  • The effect of divided attention on emotion-induced memory narrowing.Katherine R. Mickley Steinmetz, Jill D. Waring & Elizabeth A. Kensinger - 2014 - Cognition and Emotion 28 (5):881-892.
    Individuals are more likely to remember emotional than neutral information, but this benefit does not always extend to the surrounding background information. This memory narrowing is theorised to be linked to the availability of attentional resources at encoding. In contrast to the predictions of this theoretical account, altering participants' attentional resources at encoding by dividing attention did not affect emotion-induced memory narrowing. Attention was divided using three separate manipulations: a digit ordering task (Experiment 1), an arithmetic task (Experiment 2) and (...)
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  • The functional field of view becomes narrower while viewing negative emotional stimuli.Tomoe Nobata, Yuji Hakoda & Yuri Ninose - 2010 - Cognition and Emotion 24 (5):886-891.
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  • Memory for Emotional Events.Friderike Heuer & Daniel Reisberg - 2004 - In Daniel Reisberg & Paula Hertel (eds.), Memory and Emotion. Oxford University Press.
    This chapter documents the progress that has been made in our understanding of how people remember emotional events, but also highlight substantial gaps in our knowledge. It demonstrates that, in a wide range of circumstances, emotion promotes memory for all event's “central” materials, but also emotion seems to have the opposite effect, undermining memory, in terms of details at an event's “periphery”. However, this latter effect may be produced not by emotion itself but by the presence of powerful “attention magnets” (...)
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