4.7 Article

Noradrenergic modulation of emotion-induced forgetting and remembering

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 25, Issue 27, Pages 6343-6349

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0228-05.2005

Keywords

emotion; episodic memory; free recall; norepinephrine; propranolol; reboxetine

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We used a free-recall paradigm to establish a behavioral index of the retrograde and anterograde interference of emotion with episodic memory encoding. In two experiments involving 78 subjects, we show that negatively valenced items elicit retrograde amnesia, whereas positively valenced items elicit retrograde hypermnesia. These data indicate item valence is critical in determining retrograde amnesia and retrograde hypermnesia. In contrast, we show that item arousal induces an anterograde amnesic effect, consistent with the idea that a valence-evoked arousal mechanism compromises anterograde episodic encoding. Randomized double-blind administration of the beta-adrenoceptor antagonist propranolol compared with the selective norepinephrine (NE) reuptake-inhibitor reboxetine, and placebo, demonstrated that the magnitude of this emotional amnesia and hypermnesia can be upregulated and downregulated as a function of emotional arousal and central NE signaling. We conclude that a differential processing of emotional arousal and valence influences how the brain remembers and forgets.

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