AI Summary of Peer-Reviewed Research

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Affective surprise enhanced memory for temporal context

Neuroscience research
Photo by MotazPhotography on Pixabay · Pixabay License
Research area:NeuroscienceCognitive NeuroscienceMemory and Neural Mechanisms

What the study found

The study found that greater affective surprise, meaning larger moment-to-moment changes in felt emotion relative to recent ratings, was linked to better memory for when an item occurred in a sequence. Effects on item recognition memory were inconsistent across the two studies.

Why the authors say this matters

The authors conclude that affective surprise may act as a learning signal with consequences for episodic memory. They also suggest that valence-related surprise, which refers to surprise in how positive or negative a feeling is, may help bind items to their temporal contexts in memory.

What the researchers tested

The researchers introduced a new way to compute affective surprise from participants' continuous ratings of valence and arousal, meaning emotional positivity/negativity and intensity. They reanalyzed a published dataset and also ran a replication study in which participants encoded item sequences while listening to emotional music, then later re-listened to the music and rated their feelings continuously. Memory was tested after 24 hours.

What worked and what didn't

Across both studies, greater affective surprise at a given moment, or a larger mismatch with recent ratings, was associated with better memory for an item's position in a sequence. The effect on item recognition memory was not consistent across the two studies.

What to keep in mind

The abstract does not describe detailed limitations beyond noting that recognition-memory effects were inconsistent. The findings are based on two studies using emotional music and 24-hour memory testing, so the scope is limited to that setup.

Key points

  • Affective surprise was defined from changes in participants' continuous emotion ratings.
  • Greater affective surprise was linked to better memory for when items occurred in a sequence.
  • Effects on item recognition memory were inconsistent across the two studies.
  • The work included a reanalysis of a published dataset and an independent replication study.
  • Participants encoded item sequences while listening to emotional music and were tested after 24 hours.

Disclosure

Research title:
Affective surprise enhanced memory for temporal context
Authors:
Rohini Kumar, Tejas Savalia, David Clewett, Alexandra O. Cohen
Institutions:
Emory University, Emory University, Emory University, University of California, Los Angeles
Publication date:
2026-02-23
OpenAlex record:
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Image credit:
Photo by MotazPhotography on Pixabay · Pixabay License
AI provenance: This post was generated by gpt-5.4-mini (OpenAI). The original authors did not write or review this post.