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. 2016 Sep;26(3):199-210.
doi: 10.1037/pmu0000152.

The effects of song familiarity and age on phenomenological characteristics and neural recruitment during autobiographical memory retrieval

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The effects of song familiarity and age on phenomenological characteristics and neural recruitment during autobiographical memory retrieval

Jaclyn H Ford et al. Psychomusicology. 2016 Sep.

Abstract

Recent research suggests that emotional music clips can serve as a highly successful tool for eliciting rich autobiographical memories, and that the utility of these cues may be related to their subjective familiarity. The current study was designed to examine the effects of familiarity on phenomenological characteristics and neural recruitment during retrieval of autobiographical memories elicited by musical cues. Further, we were interested in understanding how these effects differ as a function of age. In an event-related functional neuroimaging study, participants retrieved autobiographical memories associated with age-specific popular musical clips. Participants rated song familiarity, as well as the temporal specificity and emotional valence of each memory. Song familiarity was associated with increased dmPFC activity and ratings of temporal specificity and positivity across participants. In addition, behavioral and neuroimaging findings suggest age differences in familiarity-related effects in which familiarity was more associated with enhancement of memory detail in young adults and affective positivity in older adults. These findings highlight important age-related shifts in how individuals retrieve autobiographical events and how personally-relevant musical cues may be used to facilitate memory retrieval.

Keywords: Aging; Emotion; Memory; Music; fMRI.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Mean correlations between familiarity and valence and between familiarity and specificity for young (black bars) and older (gray bars) adults. Error bars represent standard error of the mean. * = p<.05; *** = p< .001.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Neural activity associated with increased familiarity ratings in young (blue) and older (red) adults. Regions of overlap (purple) represent regions related to increased familiarity ratings in both young and older adults. Regions reaching an uncorrected p-value of p<.005, k ≥ 55 voxels are depicted.
Figure 3
Figure 3
a) dmPFC ROI (−16, 36, 38) associated with increased familiarity ratings in both young and older adults. b) Parameter estimates of relations between ROI activity and memory characteristics as a function of age group, and characteristic. Relations reaching significance (p<.05) are marked with an asterisk (*). Standard error bars represent 95% confidence intervals.

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