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Emotional Arousal and Interference Resolution: A Test of Arousal-biased Competition in Younger and Older AdultsWeeks, Jennifer 27 November 2012 (has links)
Arousal-biased competition (ABC; Mather & Sutherland, 2011) theory predicts that emotional arousal increases both the activation of relevant items and the suppression of irrelevant items in working memory. Study 1 tested ABC theory’s prediction in young and older adults. Suppression was measured with the Healey et al. (2010) paradigm and arousal was manipulated during interference resolution. Item accessibility was measured by comparing naming times of target and competitor words to baseline naming times. Young adults showed suppression of competitors while older adults did not. Arousal did not affect young adults’ naming times, but a mild suppression effect was seen in older adults whose arousal increased after the manipulation. A follow-up study showed that older and younger adults generally agreed on the arousing quality of the stimuli in Study 1. These studies partially support ABC theory and suggest that older adults may retain the ability to suppress irrelevant information when aroused.
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