Investigating the effect of emotional stress on adult memory for single and repeated events.

Victims of repeated incidents of abuse are often required to report incident-specific information about particular instances of the abuse. In the current study, we explored adults’ capability of such a task by examining the difference in memory for single versus repeated events that were either stressful or nonstressful. One hundred and twenty-two female participants engaged in either a single event or four highly similar events over a 4-week period. During each event, participants read and imagined themselves partaking in a hypothetical relationship scenario that consisted of either a domestic violence encounter (stressful group) or a closely matched neutral relationship encounter (nonstressful group). One week after the final scenario, participants completed recall and recognition questions about the target scenario. The findings revealed that although emotional stress had an enhancing effect on long-term memory, it did not interact with event frequency (single, repeated) for most memory measures. However, regardless of emotional stress, repeated-event participants struggled to report particular details about the target scenario, and showed greater source monitoring issues than single-event participants. Conversely, when a broader definition of memory accuracy was used that encompassed all experienced details, repeated and single event groups performed similarly. Together, the findings indicate that the testimonies of adult female complainants of repeated abuse will mostl...
Source: Psychology, Public Policy, and Law - Category: Medical Law Source Type: research