scholarly article | Q13442814 |
P356 | DOI | 10.1016/S0079-7421(09)51003-1 |
P2093 | author name string | Mara Mather | |
P2860 | cites work | The unified theory of repression | Q48343608 |
Forgetting and recovering the unforgettable | Q48344582 | ||
Remembering the good, forgetting the bad: intentional forgetting of emotional material in depression | Q48464268 | ||
The role of motivation in the age-related positivity effect in autobiographical memory | Q48555294 | ||
Depression-related differences in learning and forgetting responses to unrelated cues. | Q50877122 | ||
Depressive deficits in forgetting. | Q51014168 | ||
The directed forgetting task: application to emotionally valent material. | Q51082338 | ||
Part-set cuing effects in younger and older adults. | Q51941912 | ||
Retrieval-induced forgetting and part-list cuing in associatively structured lists. | Q51942016 | ||
Forgetting to remember: the functional relationship of decay and interference. | Q52013934 | ||
Suppression of unwanted memories: repression revisited? | Q52019283 | ||
Retrieval-induced forgetting: evidence for a recall-specific mechanism. | Q52162713 | ||
Effects of self-complexity on mood-incongruent recall. | Q54100381 | ||
False and Recovered Memories in the Laboratory and Clinic: A Review of Experimental and Clinical Evidence | Q56003563 | ||
A model for interference and forgetting | Q56656636 | ||
Rumination Reconsidered: A Psychometric Analysis | Q56771157 | ||
Lessons From the Study of Psychogenic Amnesia | Q56864737 | ||
Emotional response categorization | Q57307621 | ||
BRIEF REPORT Forgetting “murder” is not harder than forgetting “circle”: Listwise-directed forgetting of emotional words | Q60632512 | ||
Mediators of the Gender Difference in Rumination | Q62083086 | ||
The problem of child sexual abuse | Q81084598 | ||
Neural mechanisms of proactive interference-resolution | Q24648746 | ||
Choice-supportive source monitoring: do our decisions seem better to us as we age? | Q28141847 | ||
Suppressing unwanted memories by executive control | Q28206776 | ||
An examination of trace storage in free recall | Q28254613 | ||
Asymmetrical effects of positive and negative events: the mobilization-minimization hypothesis | Q28297495 | ||
Individual differences in working memory capacity and dual-process theories of the mind | Q29013567 | ||
Life is pleasant--and memory helps to keep it that way! | Q29013956 | ||
Memory--a century of consolidation | Q29618665 | ||
Working memory and retrieval: A resource-dependent inhibition model | Q30463816 | ||
Emotional organization of autobiographical memory | Q30541754 | ||
Suppression of emotional and nonemotional content in memory: effects of repetition on cognitive control | Q33886046 | ||
Retrieving positive memories to regulate negative mood: consequences for mood-congruent memory | Q33900410 | ||
Mood and memory | Q34281989 | ||
Remembering emotional experiences: the contribution of valence and arousal | Q34365227 | ||
Brain mechanisms of proactive interference in working memory. | Q34473990 | ||
The psychology and neuroscience of forgetting | Q34544788 | ||
Autobiographical memory for trauma: update on four controversies | Q34622230 | ||
Solving the emotion paradox: categorization and the experience of emotion | Q36375340 | ||
Arousal-Enhanced Location Memory for Pictures | Q36666507 | ||
Aging and goal-directed emotional attention: distraction reverses emotional biases | Q37014576 | ||
The emotional harbinger effect: poor context memory for cues that previously predicted something arousing | Q37308317 | ||
The tenacious nature of memory binding for arousing negative items | Q37345090 | ||
The moderating effects of stimulus valence and arousal on memory suppression | Q38391111 | ||
Retrieval inhibition from part-set cuing: a persisting enigma in memory research | Q38494853 | ||
Emotional Arousal and Memory Binding: An Object-Based Framework. | Q38543608 | ||
Rethinking Rumination | Q38544446 | ||
Accelerated relearning after retrieval-induced forgetting: the benefit of being forgotten | Q40134434 | ||
Remembering can cause forgetting: retrieval dynamics in long-term memory. | Q45938581 | ||
Goal-directed memory: the role of cognitive control in older adults' emotional memory. | Q45942693 | ||
Does remembering emotional items impair recall of same-emotion items? | Q45948959 | ||
Event-related activation in the human amygdala associates with later memory for individual emotional experience. | Q46322582 | ||
Response styles and the duration of episodes of depressed mood | Q46747002 | ||
P304 | page(s) | 101-120 | |
P577 | publication date | 2009-01-01 | |
P1433 | published in | Psychology of Learning and Motivation: Advances in Research and Theory | Q15766552 |
P1476 | title | Chapter 3 When Emotion Intensifies Memory Interference |