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The Relationship Between Affect in Dreams and Emotional Memory Consolidation

Research in the field of cognitive neuroscience has focused on the role of sleep in various neurocognitive processes such as memory consolidation, however, an area that has not been fully researched is the role of dreaming in these memory processes. This study aimed to determine the relationship bet...

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Main Author: Du Plessis, Li?tte
Other Authors: Lipinska, Malgorzata
Format: Thesis
Language:Eng
Published: Department of Psychology 2024
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access_status_str Open Access
author Du Plessis, Li?tte
author2 Lipinska, Malgorzata
author_browse Du Plessis, Li?tte
Lipinska, Malgorzata
author_facet Lipinska, Malgorzata
Du Plessis, Li?tte
author_sort Du Plessis, Li?tte
collection Thesis
description Research in the field of cognitive neuroscience has focused on the role of sleep in various neurocognitive processes such as memory consolidation, however, an area that has not been fully researched is the role of dreaming in these memory processes. This study aimed to determine the relationship between affect experienced in dreams and emotional memory consolidation. Considering that REM dreams are laden with emotion and that emotion enhances memory, one possibility is that dreaming affect could also play a role in emotional memory consolidation. The hypothesis was that the greater the intensity of affect in a dream, the greater the memory retention will be for emotional information, but not neutral information. 126 healthy participants, aged 18 – 50, were recruited. On the night of the study, the participant viewed a series of pictures from the SA-APS in an online environment. Afterwards, they verbally recalled as many pictures as possible. The following morning, they were asked to recall any dreams and rate the emotional intensity of their dreams. Participants then again verbally recalled all the pictures that they could remember from the previous night. Contrary to the prediction, affect intensity, regardless of valence, did not predict memory consolidation of valenced information. The findings rather showed a general effect of dream affect intensity on overall memory retention. Furthermore, a specific emotion, fear, seemed to drive this general consolidation effect. The secondary analysis revealed that an increase in negative affect in dreams predicted better memory retention of negative information. Increased negative affect may create a need for increased mental processing and, in turn, support better memory consolidation. These findings have implications for psychiatric disorders, such as major depression, which is characterised by negative affect and increased memory sensitivity for negative stimuli. Keywords: affect, dreams, emotional memory consolidation, REM sleep
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language Eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:34:17.944Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
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publisher Department of Psychology
publisherStr Department of Psychology
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/39391 The Relationship Between Affect in Dreams and Emotional Memory Consolidation Du Plessis, Li?tte Lipinska, Malgorzata Psychology Research in the field of cognitive neuroscience has focused on the role of sleep in various neurocognitive processes such as memory consolidation, however, an area that has not been fully researched is the role of dreaming in these memory processes. This study aimed to determine the relationship between affect experienced in dreams and emotional memory consolidation. Considering that REM dreams are laden with emotion and that emotion enhances memory, one possibility is that dreaming affect could also play a role in emotional memory consolidation. The hypothesis was that the greater the intensity of affect in a dream, the greater the memory retention will be for emotional information, but not neutral information. 126 healthy participants, aged 18 – 50, were recruited. On the night of the study, the participant viewed a series of pictures from the SA-APS in an online environment. Afterwards, they verbally recalled as many pictures as possible. The following morning, they were asked to recall any dreams and rate the emotional intensity of their dreams. Participants then again verbally recalled all the pictures that they could remember from the previous night. Contrary to the prediction, affect intensity, regardless of valence, did not predict memory consolidation of valenced information. The findings rather showed a general effect of dream affect intensity on overall memory retention. Furthermore, a specific emotion, fear, seemed to drive this general consolidation effect. The secondary analysis revealed that an increase in negative affect in dreams predicted better memory retention of negative information. Increased negative affect may create a need for increased mental processing and, in turn, support better memory consolidation. These findings have implications for psychiatric disorders, such as major depression, which is characterised by negative affect and increased memory sensitivity for negative stimuli. Keywords: affect, dreams, emotional memory consolidation, REM sleep 2024-04-17T13:33:41Z 2024-04-17T13:33:41Z 2023 2024-04-17T13:23:43Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters Psychology http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39391 Eng application/pdf Department of Psychology Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Psychology
Du Plessis, Li?tte
The Relationship Between Affect in Dreams and Emotional Memory Consolidation
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The Relationship Between Affect in Dreams and Emotional Memory Consolidation
title_full The Relationship Between Affect in Dreams and Emotional Memory Consolidation
title_fullStr The Relationship Between Affect in Dreams and Emotional Memory Consolidation
title_full_unstemmed The Relationship Between Affect in Dreams and Emotional Memory Consolidation
title_short The Relationship Between Affect in Dreams and Emotional Memory Consolidation
title_sort relationship between affect in dreams and emotional memory consolidation
topic Psychology
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39391
work_keys_str_mv AT duplessislitte therelationshipbetweenaffectindreamsandemotionalmemoryconsolidation
AT duplessislitte relationshipbetweenaffectindreamsandemotionalmemoryconsolidation