4.3 Article

Investigating the interaction of pleasantness and arousal and the role of aesthetic emotions on episodic memory using a musical what-where-when paradigm

Journal

COGNITION & EMOTION
Volume 37, Issue 2, Pages 320-328

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/02699931.2023.2185206

Keywords

music; emotion; aesthetic; episodic memory; what-where-when

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Recent evidence suggests that pleasant music has a positive influence on episodic memory encoding. However, it is unclear if this effect holds regardless of the arousingness of the music or the aesthetic emotions it induces. The current study used an online what-where-when paradigm to investigate the influence of music on memory encoding in a rich spatiotemporal environment. The results showed that pleasant low arousing music was associated with better recall performance, and negative aesthetic emotions compromised memory performance.
Recent evidence suggests that the presence of music experienced as pleasant positively influences episodic memory (EM) encoding. However, it is unclear whether this impact of pleasant music holds regardless of how arousing the music is, and what influence, if any, music-induced aesthetic emotions have. Furthermore, most music EM studies have used verbal or facial memory tasks limiting the generalisability of these findings to everyday EMs with spatiotemporal richness. The current study used an online what-where-when paradigm to assess music's influence on EM encoding in a rich spatiotemporal environment. 105 participants carried out the what-where-when task in the presence of either silence or one of four musical stimuli falling into the four corners of the 2-D circumplex emotion model. We observed an interaction effect between the pleasantness and arousingness of music stimuli, whereby for pleasant stimuli, the low arousing excerpt was associated with better recall performance compared to the high arousing excerpt. We also observed that, across all excerpts, experience of negative aesthetic emotions was associated with compromised recall performance. Together, our results confirm the deleterious influence arousing stimuli can have on memory and support the notion that aesthetic-emotional experience of music can influence how memories are encoded in everyday life.

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